> That (to me) is the main reason to use the -d... But then I prefer to use > keyboard shortcuts to switch the focus...
I have "jr" aliased to joe -readonly so I use that as a viewer too. Besides copying, I save blocks into /tmp a lot. If fvwm has a keyboard shortcut for changing the focus I haven't found it. alt-tab is the same as Microsoft Windows, so it might have worked in fvwm95 which tried to work like Windows 95. > I on the other hand use multiple virtual desktop areas (workspaces some call > em) FVWM has the same virtual desktops, except only one common wallpaper for all of them. Down in the bottom right corner of my screenshot is the pager, this screenshot was of the upper left pane/page/whatever. I have mine set to 3x3. fvwm doesn't have distinct desktops like KDE, you can drag things off of one onto the next. The screen flips to where you're going when your mouse cursor gets to the edge as you're dragging. Edge scroll and X's virtual desktops get turned off early. I use KDE in Linux. I try to get that organized, I tend to open the same things in the same places, but then I get looking something up in a man page and hit the "see also" section at the bottom, so I pop up more rxvt windows with more man pages to look up what might be closer to what I'm looking for. I often don't want to close the original yet, and some things I can only find by the "see also" sections of other pages. In OpenBSD "man write" gets info on the program that writes to somebody else's terminal, not writing to a file or device which is usually what I want, and it's not in the "see also" of the first page. I haven't learned the section numbers yet. And I almost always have my reading glasses on. >> Maybe one approach would be to have the window manager consume the >> first mouse click in a window when that mouse click is in an unfocused >> window. I wouldn't be surprised if fvwm can be set to do that, in the >> window styles, but I haven't looked into it because I just thought of >> it. > > That sounds to me like it would be a good feature. But if aliasing mc to > the -d option works for you, why bother? I guess because I'd like to use the mouse for some things in mc like selecting a file, but be able to lock out other things like the sort order and whatever it does in the viewer. Changing the sort order borders on dangerous to me because I keep looking for something that's suddenly off screen. Alan Credit is the root of all evil. - AB1JX _______________________________________________ mc mailing list http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/mc