_NET_WM_NAME, UTF-8_STRING |
The Client SHOULD set this to the title of the window in UTF-8 encoding. If
set, the Window Manager should use this in preference to WM_NAME.
_NET_WM_VISIBLE_NAME, UTF-8_STRING |
If the Window Manager displays a window name other than _NET_WM_NAME the Window Manager MUST set this to the title displayed in UTF-8 encoding.
Rationale: For window managers that display a title different from the _NET_WM_NAME or WM_NAME of the window (i.e. xterm <1>, xterm <2>, ... is shown, but _NET_WM_NAME / WM_NAME is still xterm for each window). This property allows taskbars / pagers to display the same title as the window manager.
_NET_WM_ICON_NAME, UTF-8_STRING |
The Client SHOULD set this to the title of the icon for this window in UTF-8
encoding. If set, the Window Manager should use this in preference to
WM_ICON_NAME.
_NET_WM_VISIBLE_ICON_NAME, UTF-8_STRING |
If the Window Manager displays an icon name other than _NET_WM_ICON_NAME
the Window Manager MUST set this to the title displayed in UTF-8 encoding.
_NET_WM_DESKTOP <desktop>, CARDINAL/32 |
Cardinal to determine the desktop the window is in (or wants to be) starting
with 0 for the first desktop. A Client MAY choose not to set this property,
in which case the Window Manager SHOULD place as it wishes. 0xFFFFFFFF
indicates that the window SHOULD appear on all desktops/workspaces.
The Window Manager should honor _NET_WM_DESKTOP whenever a withdrawn window
requests to be mapped.
A Client can request a change of desktop for a non-withdrawn window by sending
a _NET_WM_DESKTOP client message to the root window:
_NET_WM_DESKTOP window = the respective client window message_type = _NET_WM_DESKTOP format = 32 data.l[0] = new_desktop |
The Window Manager MUST keep this property updated on all windows.
_NET_WM_WINDOW_TYPE, ATOM[]/32 |
This SHOULD be set by the Client before mapping, to a list of atoms indicating
the functional type of the window. This property SHOULD be used by the window
manager in determining the decoration, stacking position and other behaviour
of the window. The Client SHOULD specify window types in order of preference
(the first being most preferable), but MUST include at least one of the basic
window type atoms from the list below. This is to allow for extension of the
list of types, whilst providing default behaviour for window managers that do
not recognise the extensions.
Rationale: This hint is intend to replace the MOTIF hints. One of the
objections to the MOTIF hints is that they are a purely visual description of
the window decoration. By describing the function of the window, the window
manager can apply consistent decoration and behaviour to windows of the same
type. Possible examples of behaviour include keeping dock/panels on top or
allowing pinnable menus / toolbars to only be hidden when another window has
focus (NextStep style).
_NET_WM_WINDOW_TYPE_DESKTOP, ATOM _NET_WM_WINDOW_TYPE_DOCK, ATOM _NET_WM_WINDOW_TYPE_TOOLBAR, ATOM _NET_WM_WINDOW_TYPE_MENU, ATOM _NET_WM_WINDOW_TYPE_DIALOG, ATOM _NET_WM_WINDOW_TYPE_NORMAL, ATOM |
_NET_WM_WINDOW_TYPE_DESKTOP indicates a desktop feature. This can include a
single window containing desktop icons with the same dimensions as the screen,
allowing the desktop environment to have full control of the desktop, without
the need for proxying root window clicks.
_NET_WM_WINDOW_TYPE_DOCK indicates a dock or panel feature. Typically a
window manager would keep such windows on top of all other windows.
_NET_WM_WINDOW_TYPE_TOOLBAR and _NET_WM_WINDOW_TYPE_MENU indicate toolbar and
pinnable menu windows, respectively.
_NET_WM_WINDOW_TYPE_DIALOG indicates that this is a dialog window. If
_NET_WM_WINDOW_TYPE is not set, then windows with WM_TRANSIENT_FOR set MUST
be taken as this type.
_NET_WM_WINDOW_TYPE_NORMAL indicates that this is a normal, top-level window.
Windows with neither _NET_WM_WINDOW_TYPE nor WM_TRANSIENT_FOR are set MUST
be taken as this type.
_NET_WM_STATE, ATOM[] |
A list of hints describing the window state. Atoms present in the list MUST be
considered set, atoms not present in the list MUST be considered not set. The
Window Manager SHOULD honor
_NET_WM_STATE whenever a withdrawn window requests to be mapped. A Client
wishing to change the state of a window MUST send a _NET_WM_STATE client
message to the root window (see below). The Window Manager MUST keep this
property updated to reflect the current state of the window.
Possible atoms are:
_NET_WM_STATE_MODAL, ATOM _NET_WM_STATE_STICKY, ATOM _NET_WM_STATE_MAXIMIZED_VERT, ATOM _NET_WM_STATE_MAXIMIZED_HORZ, ATOM _NET_WM_STATE_SHADED, ATOM _NET_WM_STATE_SKIP_TASKBAR, ATOM _NET_WM_STATE_SKIP_PAGER, ATOM |
An implementation MAY add new atoms to this list. Implementations
without extensions MUST ignore any unknown atoms, effectively removing
them from the list. These extension atoms MUST NOT start with the prefix
_NET.
_NET_WM_STATE_MODAL indicates that this is a modal dialog box. The
WM_TRANSIENT_FOR hint MUST be set to indicate which window the dialog is a
modal for, or set to the root window if the dialog is a modal for its window
group.
_NET_WM_STATE_STICKY indicates that the Window Manager SHOULD keep the
window's position fixed on the screen, even when the virtual desktop scrolls.
_NET_WM_STATE_MAXIMIZED_{VERT,HORZ} indicates that the window is
{vertically,horizontally} maximised.
_NET_WM_STATE_SHADED indicates that the window is shaded.
_NET_WM_SKIP_TASKBAR indicates that the window should not be included on a
taskbar.
_NET_WM_SKIP_PAGER indicates that the window should not be included on a
pager.
To change the state of a mapped window, a Client MUST send a _NET_WM_STATE client message to the root window (window is the respective window, type _NET_WM_STATE, format 32, l[0]=<the action, as listed below>, l[1]=<First property to alter>, l[2]=<Second property to alter>). This message allows two properties to be changed simultaneously, specifically to allow both horizontal and vertical maximisation to be altered together. l[2] MUST be set to zero if only one property is to be changed. l[0], the action, MUST be one of:
_NET_WM_STATE_REMOVE 0 /* remove/unset property */ _NET_WM_STATE_ADD 1 /* add/set property */ _NET_WM_STATE_TOGGLE 2 /* toggle property */ |
See also the implementation notes on
urgency
and
fixed size windows.
_NET_WM_STRUT, left, right, top, bottom, CARDINAL[4]/32 |
This property MUST be set by the Client if the window is to reserve space at
the edge of the screen. The property contains a 4 cardinals specifying the
width of the reserved area at each border of the screen.
The order of the borders is left, right, top, bottom.
The client MAY change this property anytime, therefore the Window Manager MUST
watch out for property notify events.
The purpose of struts is to reserve space at the borders of the desktop. This
is very useful for a docking area, a taskbar or a panel, for instance. The
window manager should know about this reserved space in order to be able to
preserve the space. Also maximized windows should not cover that reserved
space.
Rationale: A simple "do not cover" hint is not enough for dealing with e.g.
auto-hide panels.
Notes: An auto-hide panel SHOULD set the strut to be its minimum, hidden size.
A "corner" panel that does not extend for the full length of a screen border
SHOULD only set one strut.
_NET_WM_ICON_GEOMETRY, x, y, width, height, CARDINAL[4]/32 |
This optional property MAY be set by standalone tools like a taskbar or an
iconbox. It specifies the geometry of a possible icon in case the window is iconified.
Rationale: This makes it possible for a window manager to display a nice
animation like morphing the window into its icon.
_NET_WM_ICON CARDINAL[][2+n]/32 |
This is an array of possible icons for the client. This specification does
not stipulate what size these icons should be, but individual desktop
environments or toolkits may do so. The Window Manager MAY scale any of these
icons to an appropriate size.
This is an array of 32bit packed CARDINAL ARGB with high byte being A, low
byte being B. First two cardinals are width, height. Data is in rows, left to
right and top to bottom.
_NET_WM_PID CARDINAL/32 |
If set, this property MUST contain the process ID of the client owning this
window. This MAY be used by the Window Manager to kill windows which do not
respond to the _NET_WM_PING protocol.
See also the implementation notes on killing hung processes.
_NET_WM_HANDLED_ICONS |
This property can be set by clients to indicate that the Window Manager need
not provide icons for iconified windows, for example if the client is a taskbar
and provides buttons for iconified windows.
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