Sawfish (window manager)

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Sawfish
Developer(s)John Harper (retired), Janek Kozicki (2007), Christopher Bratusek, Sawfish community
Initial releaseJanuary 1, 2000; 24 years ago (2000-01-01)
Stable release
1.13.0[1] Edit this on Wikidata / 24 December 2021
Preview release
1.12.90[2] Edit this on Wikidata / 25 August 2017
Repository
Written inC, Lisp
Operating systemLinux, FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, Unix, Mac OS X
TypeWindow manager
LicenseGPL-2.0-or-later
Websitesawfish.tuxfamily.org
Sawfish Xsession running on Debian 7 Linux

Sawfish is a window manager for the X Window System. It aims to manage windows in the most flexible and attractive manner possible. It is able to match a window by multiple criteria such as application, size or role, and based on this, can change the window's position, appearance, or behavior. This allows for highly customized window handling such as web browser windows opening full-screen without borders on a secondary monitor, a default terminal emulator window displaying full-screen at the desktop level, and all dialog box windows under a certain size opening on the lower right corner of the main monitor while larger ones are centered.

Sawfish uses a Lisp-like scripting language, rep, for all of its code and configuration, making it particularly easy to customize, or program many kinds of behavior, responding to window creation, deletion, or any other changes. There is a GUI configuration utility for users who do not wish to edit configuration files directly.

History[edit]

Sawfish was first called Sawmill. The name was changed because another software program had the same name. It was the standard window manager of the GNOME desktop environment until it was replaced by Metacity in Gnome 2.2.[3]

The development had stopped, but the community restarted it in 2007.[citation needed]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Error: Unable to display the reference properly. See the documentation for details.
  2. ^ Error: Unable to display the reference properly. See the documentation for details.
  3. ^ Cumming, Murray (February 2003). "Metacity Window Manager". GNOME 2.2.0 Release Notes. Gnome. Retrieved 2007-02-19.

External links[edit]