Copyright | (c) daniel@wagner-home.com |
---|---|
License | BSD3-style (see LICENSE) |
Maintainer | daniel@wagner-home.com |
Stability | unstable |
Portability | unportable |
Safe Haskell | Safe-Inferred |
Language | Haskell2010 |
Warp the pointer to a given window or screen.
Usage
You can use this module with the following in your ~/.xmonad/xmonad.hs
:
import XMonad.Actions.Warp
then add appropriate keybindings to warp the pointer; for example:
, ((modm, xK_z ), warpToWindow (1%2) (1%2)) -- @@ Move pointer to currently focused window -- mod-ctrl-{w,e,r} @@ Move mouse pointer to screen 1, 2, or 3 [((modm .|. controlMask, key), warpToScreen sc (1%2) (1%2)) | (key, sc) <- zip [xK_w, xK_e, xK_r] [0..]]
Note that warping to a particular screen may change the focus.
banish :: Corner -> X () Source #
Move the mouse cursor to a corner of the focused window. Useful for uncluttering things.
Internally, this uses numerical parameters. We parametrize on the Corner
type so the user need not see the violence inherent in
the system.
warpToScreen
and warpToWindow
can be used in a variety of
ways. Suppose you wanted to emulate Ratpoison's 'banish' command,
which moves the mouse pointer to a corner? warpToWindow can do that!
banishScreen :: Corner -> X () Source #
Same as banish
but moves the mouse to the corner of the
currently focused screen