On 16 September 2010 18:56, Claude Rubinson wrote:
> There are certain websites for which I like to customize how FVWM
> treats the browser window (e.g., different styles for different
> sites). As long as the name of the website is part of the window
> name, it's not a problem.
FVWM sets the ti
There are certain websites for which I like to customize how FVWM
treats the browser window (e.g., different styles for different
sites). As long as the name of the website is part of the window
name, it's not a problem.
Occasionally, however, I'll run into a site where there's no stable
name. F
Claude Rubinson writes:
> There are certain websites for which I like to customize how FVWM
> treats the browser window (e.g., different styles for different
> sites). As long as the name of the website is part of the window
> name, it's not a problem.
>
> Occasionally, however, I'll run into a
On Thu, Sep 16, 2010 at 07:03:26PM +0100, Thomas Adam wrote:
> > Occasionally, however, I'll run into a site where there's no stable
> > name. For example, the online music streaming site MOG.com only
> > includes the name of the artist and song in the window name. Many X
> > clients let you spec
On Thu, Sep 16, 2010 at 02:40:58PM -0500, Claude Rubinson wrote:
> On Thu, Sep 16, 2010 at 07:03:26PM +0100, Thomas Adam wrote:
> > > Occasionally, however, I'll run into a site where there's no stable
> > > name. For example, the online music streaming site MOG.com only
> > > includes the name of
On Thu, Sep 16, 2010 at 08:49:23PM +0100, Thomas Adam wrote:
> my preferred solution is to use IndexedWindowName, and hope for the
> best. It makes for some ugly style matching, but there's ways round
> that if you really care.
Yep, that's was going to be my next strategy. Good to know that my
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