7 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I am trying to write a shell script to help with some digital signature work currently being undertaken where we have a file that contains a number of rows ending with ^M.
What I need to do is concatenate this using shell scripting and retain the control character. E.G.
abc^M... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: chris01010
5 Replies
2. OS X (Apple)
I have had an apple mac book for several months. I have been learning about it, I even got the snow leopard manual. It says nothing about right clicking on the apple mouse interface(trackpad?). How do I do this? Thank You.:b: (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: N-Training
2 Replies
3. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi.
I´ve a question to a running script:
i=0 #fill an Array with all files in a folder ending with .sys
for Par in *.sys ; do
Par2="$Par" ;
i=$((i... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Lock3
1 Replies
4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi All
How can i control for loop with two different variables in csh shell
Regards
Nikhil (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Nikhilindurkar
1 Replies
5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi,
I am very new to scripting and have a question regarding variables and their use in a bandwidth monitoring script.
I have identified a few primary variables being;
Bandwidth CIR Download=32kbits <- these match as per the script below
Bandwidth PIR Download=96kbits
Bandwidth CIR... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: vinnir
1 Replies
6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi all,
when i ssh into my linux machine, i can do a double left click and then right click to paste it anywhere i need.
However, on the actual machine, in the terminal, i cannot do a double left click and right click to paste it. i need to right click and select Copy followed by click click... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: new2ss
1 Replies
7. Post Here to Contact Site Administrators and Moderators
This is a niCe idea.
BUT it is makeing my eyes cross due to the color contrast of the letters. can you do it in a matching yellow/white/black anything other then the red would be great. it makes it annoying to look at that portion of the screen.
But it is a great idea. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Optimus_P
2 Replies
LWM(1) General Commands Manual LWM(1)
NAME
lwm - Lightweight Window Manager for the X Window System
SYNTAX
lwm [ -s session-id ]
DESCRIPTION
Lwm is a window manager for the X Window System. It provides enough features to allow the user to manage their windows, and no more.
Windows are surrounded by a frame with a titlebar at the top next to a small box. The frame is a grey colour for all windows except that
which has the input focus, where it is black.
In the default configuration, lwm uses the enter-to-focus scheme, where moving the pointer into a window gives that window the input focus.
Lwm may also be configured to use the click-to-focus scheme, where a window must be clicked on (with any button) to receive the input
focus. Clicking on a window in this mode causes the window to be raised. Note that a click used to focus a window is always swallowed by
lwm, so clicking a button in a new window requires two clicks.
A button 1 click on a window frame brings that window to the top. Dragging button 1 on the frame of a resizable window repositions that
edge of the window. If a corner rather than an edge is dragged, then both edges forming the corner are repositioned. While you're reshaping
a window, a little window pops up to show you the window's current size.
In the default configuration, button 1 on the root window does nothing.
Button 2 is used to drag a window by its frame, repositioning the window but maintaining its position in the window stack.
In the default configuration, button 2 on the root window brings up a new shell.
A button 3 click on a window frame hides that window. Pressing button 3 on the root window brings up a menu of all the hidden windows.
Releasing the button while over an item will unhide the named window.
A button 3 click in the frame while Shift is held down pushes the window to the back, under any other windows. (Users with 4-button mice
are encouraged to use their fourth button for this function.)
A click with any button inside the little white box in a window's frame can be used to close the window.
OPTIONS
Lwm accepts the following command line options:
-s specifies a client ID for the X Session Management system, and is used exclusively by session managers.
RESOURCES
Lwm understands the following X resources:
titlefont font used in window titles
popupFont font used in popup window (menu/size indicator)
border width in pixels of window borders
button1 program spawned when button 1 is clicked on the root window
button2 program spawned when button 2 is clicked on the root window
focus focus mode, one of "enter" for enter-to-focus (or sloppy focus), or "click" for click-to-focus
SEE ALSO
X(7)
AUTHORS
Elliott Hughes <ehughes@bluearc.com>, James Carter <james@jfc.org.uk>
LWM(1)