Sujet : Re: getting the most out of TWM De : kludge (at) *nospam* panix.com (Scott Dorsey) Groupes :comp.misc Date : 17. Jul 2024, 15:50:40 Autres entêtes Organisation : Former users of Netcom shell (1989-2000) Message-ID :<v78lo0$in5$1@panix2.panix.com> References :1
I ran systems at a facility that had a number of Vaxstations using VMS with the VWS windowing system as well as a few Sun machines running SunView. These were both windowing systems without access to remote windows on other systems, and without X behind them. Instead they used proprietary ystems calls for window displays, and people liked the UIs.
We got X11r3 on some of the Sun systems, and I don't remember where we got the kit from but it wasn't sunfreeware.com and it did some as a binary kit that sat in /usr/local/X11. I started up the X server and got a nice grey screen and couldn't do a damn thing with it. So I figured out that I needed a script that started up a window manager and what came with it was twm. But when I did this, I hardly got any more.
After looking into the man pages for a while, I figured out how to configure a .twmrc file, and I did it with SunView in mind and set the thing up to look as much like SunView as possible with a similar background, similar menus and submenus, and similar mouse button operations. It was pretty good, and people who were used to SunView liked it.
I thought of X11 at the time not as a windowing environment but as a kit that you could use to build a winding environment. That's not how I had started out thinking about it, but it's how I ended up.
I think it's still reasonable to think of twm this way. You can make it however you want it, but it doesn't come with much. Man, it is so much faster than struggling with gnome, though. --scott
-- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis."