On 5/8/07, Gilles Roy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
How do I get rid of that status bar if I run xterm in Gnome?
By reading the f*ing manual:
% man xterm
+tb is the option you want.
nikolai
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On Mon, May 07, 2007 at 10:33:12PM -0500, Andrew Deason wrote:
On Mon, 07 May 2007 23:26:27 -0400
Gilles Roy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Which terminal emulators do you use? I'm looking for that can be
configured to hide the menu, the window border, scrollbars, etc, so
that screen can have as m
On Mon, 07 May 2007 23:26:27 -0400
Gilles Roy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Which terminal emulators do you use? I'm looking for that can be
> configured to hide the menu, the window border, scrollbars, etc, so
> that screen can have as much real estate as possible.
xterm? rxvt? What terminal emu
Which terminal emulators do you use? I'm looking for that can be
configured to hide the menu, the window border, scrollbars, etc, so that
screen can have as much real estate as possible.
I know that xfce4-terminal and gnome-terminal that can do this. Are
there any others?
Thanks,
Gilles
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cga2000 wrote:
| On Sat, May 05, 2007 at 12:16:09PM EDT, Joe Zbiciak wrote:
| >> Sounds like a bad terminfo entry, doesn't it?
| >
| >Actually, I'm guessing it's a bug in the terminal emulator and how it
| >handles windows that aren't an integer multiple of the character width.
|
| Yes
On Mon, May 07, 2007 at 08:35:42AM -0400, Gilles Roy wrote:
I've looked through the mutt docs and didn't see anything that could help
me. If I run Vim in CLI mode, it also has status bars but the problem
doesn't occur. However, there is a difference between Vim and Mutt. In Mutt,
the status bar
On Sun, May 06, 2007 at 09:52:28AM -0400, cga2000 wrote:
Actually, I'm guessing it's a bug in the terminal emulator and how it
handles windows that aren't an integer multiple of the character width.
Yes, but then the OP would likely argue that since it only occurs when
screen is running .