Olav,
Try setting up the projector as an additional display using xrandr. That may
be what you need. I have used xrandr on Slackware and Red Hat Enterprise 6.8
environments to use multiple displays. I also believe you can set up fvwm to
create multiple displays that are independent of each
Folks,
I have fvwm 2.6.7 (I believe) running in RHEL 6.8 and have not had a problem.
Don
Martin Cermak wrote on 06/20/2018 12:33 AM:
> Hello,
>
> On Tue 2018-06-19 15:51 , William Muriithi wrote:
>> Morning,
>>
>> I am interested in using fvwm on a Centos 6 and curious if this is a
is another Qt-based terminal emulator that might confirm
whether the widget set is having an effect.
--
==============
Donald R. Laster Jr.
25 Heidl Ave
West Long Branch, NJ 07764
Email : las...@dlaster.com
donaldrlaste...@gmail.com (Cell)
As I read the comments related to the configuration file parsing maybe the
initial focus should be on unifying the parsing code itself into a single
common set of functions or library package first. As I understand it, from the
reading the posts on this subject, many of the modules have their
When it comes to functions the cleaner format might be to use a variant of the
Bourne/Bash/"C" format such as this:
function name(arg1, arg2, ... argN)
{
return(defaults to 0 if not specified)
}
White space would be irrelevant, whether tabs or spaces are used.
It is the best Window manager around. I use it with a simple 4x24 virtual
window environment. No other window manager I have seen is capable of doing
this. It is great for accessing multiple environments in a organized fashion.
I use it on Slackware, where it is part of the distribution, an
n the script is being run within. Thus if the script is being run in the
virtual screen/viewport 10 (horizontal) at 2 (vertical) it could determine the
location it is at and make any position adjustments desired.
So far I have not found any way that would allow this.
Sincerely,
Donald R Laster Jr.