Copyright | (c) 2020 Ivan Brennan <ivanbrennan@gmail.com> |
---|---|
License | BSD3-style (see LICENSE) |
Maintainer | Ivan Brennan <ivanbrennan@gmail.com> |
Stability | stable |
Portability | unportable |
Safe Haskell | None |
Language | Haskell2010 |
Functions for rotating some elements around the stack while keeping others anchored in place. Useful in combination with layouts that dictate window visibility based on stack position, such as XMonad.Layout.LimitWindows.
Synopsis
- surfaceNext :: X ()
- surfacePrev :: X ()
- rotateSome :: (a -> Bool) -> Stack a -> Stack a
Usage
You can use this module with the following in your ~/.xmonad/xmonad.hs
:
import XMonad.Actions.RotateSome
and add keybindings such as the following:
, ((modMask .|. controlMask, xK_n), surfaceNext) , ((modMask .|. controlMask, xK_p), surfacePrev)
Consider a workspace whose stack contains five windows A B C D E but whose layout limits how many will actually be shown, showing only the first plus two additional windows, starting with the third:
┌─────┬─────┐ │ │ C │ │ A ├─────┤ │ │ D │ └─────┴─────┘ A B C D E _ ____
If C has focus and we'd like to replace it with one of the unshown windows,
surfaceNext
will move the next unshown window, E, into the focused position:
┌─────┬─────┐ ┌─────┬─────┐ │ │ *C* │ │ │ *E* │ │ A ├─────┤ surfaceNext -> │ A ├─────┤ │ │ D │ │ │ D │ └─────┴─────┘ └─────┴─────┘ A B *C* D E A C *E* D B _ ____ _ ____
This repositioned windows B C E by treating them as a sequence that can be rotated through the focused stack position. Windows A and D remain anchored to their original (visible) positions.
A second call to surfaceNext
moves B into focus:
┌─────┬─────┐ ┌─────┬─────┐ │ │ *E* │ │ │ *B* │ │ A ├─────┤ surfaceNext -> │ A ├─────┤ │ │ D │ │ │ D │ └─────┴─────┘ └─────┴─────┘ A C *E* D B A E *B* D C _ ____ _ ____
A third call would complete the cycle, bringing C back into focus.
surfaceNext :: X () Source #
Treating the focused window and any unshown windows as a ring that can be rotated through the focused position, surface the next element in the ring.
surfacePrev :: X () Source #
Like surfaceNext
in reverse.
rotateSome :: (a -> Bool) -> Stack a -> Stack a Source #
treats the elements of rotateSome
p stackstack
that satisfy predicate
p
as a ring that can be rotated, while all other elements remain anchored
in place.