[ < ] | [ > ] | [ << ] | [ Up ] | [ >> ] | [Top] | [Contents] | [Index] | [ ? ] |
Start emacs unless it is already running, in which case focus it.
Print version information and compilation date.
Warp the mouse the lower right corner of the current head.
Warp the mouse to the specified location.
Warp the mouse by the specified amount from its current position.
Simulate a pointer button event at the current pointer location. Note: this function is unlikely to work unless your X server and CLX implementation support XTEST.
Restart stumpwm. This is handy if a new stumpwm executable has been made and you wish to replace the existing process with it.
Any run-time customizations will be lost after the restart.
Soft restart StumpWM. The lisp process isn’t restarted. Instead, control jumps to the very beginning of the stumpwm program. This differs from RESTART, which restarts the unix process.
Since the process isn’t restarted, existing customizations remain after the restart.
Display the last message. If the previous command was lastmsg, then continue cycling back through the message history.
List all available commands.
This way you can exit from command mode. Also aliased as abort.
Quit StumpWM.
Reload StumpWM using asdf
.
Display the date and time.
Evaluate the s-expression and display the result(s).
Command mode allows you to type StumpWM commands without needing the <C-t> prefix. Keys not bound in StumpWM will still get sent to the current window. To exit command mode, type <C-g>.
List all the properties of the current window and their values, like xprop.
Shows the properties of the current window. These properties can be used for matching windows with run-or-raise or window placement rules.
nil
[ < ] | [ > ] | [ << ] | [ Up ] | [ >> ] | [Top] | [Contents] | [Index] | [ ? ] |
This document was generated on January 28, 2024 using texi2html 1.82.