xmonad-contrib-0.18.0: Community-maintained extensions for xmonad
Copyright(c) David Roundy <droundy@darcs.net>
LicenseBSD3-style (see LICENSE)
Maintainernone
Stabilityunstable
Portabilityunportable
Safe HaskellSafe-Inferred
LanguageHaskell2010

XMonad.Layout.LayoutScreens

Contents

Description

Divide a single screen into multiple screens.

Synopsis

Usage

This module allows you to pretend that you have more than one screen by dividing a single screen into multiple screens that xmonad will treat as separate screens. This should definitely be useful for testing the behavior of xmonad under Xinerama, and it's possible that it'd also be handy for use as an actual user interface, if you've got a very large screen and long for greater flexibility (e.g. being able to see your email window at all times, a crude mimic of sticky windows).

You can use this module with the following in your xmonad.hs file:

import XMonad.Layout.LayoutScreens
import XMonad.Layout.TwoPane

Then add some keybindings; for example:

  , ((modm .|. shiftMask,                 xK_space), layoutScreens 2 (TwoPane 0.5 0.5))
  , ((modm .|. controlMask .|. shiftMask, xK_space), rescreen)

Another example use would be to handle a scenario where xrandr didn't work properly (e.g. a VNC X server in my case) and you want to be able to resize your screen (e.g. to match the size of a remote VNC client):

import XMonad.Layout.LayoutScreens
  , ((modm .|. shiftMask, xK_space),
       layoutScreens 1 (fixedLayout [Rectangle 0 0 1024 768]))
  , ((modm .|. controlMask .|. shiftMask, xK_space), rescreen)

For detailed instructions on editing your key bindings, see the tutorial.

layoutScreens :: LayoutClass l Int => Int -> l Int -> X () Source #

Modify all screens.

layoutSplitScreen :: LayoutClass l Int => Int -> l Int -> X () Source #

Modify current screen.