Hi Martin,
On 20 August 2013 11:32, Martin Kopta wrote:
> On Fri, Aug 02, 2013 at 10:15:43PM +0200, Anselm R Garbe wrote:
> > On 29 July 2013 09:50, Martin Kopta wrote:
> > > On Wed, Jul 03, 2013 at 06:59:34PM +0200, Anselm R Garbe wrote:
> > >> Do you experience this with vanilla dwm from git?
On Fri, Aug 02, 2013 at 10:15:43PM +0200, Anselm R Garbe wrote:
> Hi Martin,
>
> On 29 July 2013 09:50, Martin Kopta wrote:
> > On Wed, Jul 03, 2013 at 06:59:34PM +0200, Anselm R Garbe wrote:
> >> Do you experience this with vanilla dwm from git? If not, then it
> >> might help to see your rules
Hi Martin,
On 29 July 2013 09:50, Martin Kopta wrote:
> On Wed, Jul 03, 2013 at 06:59:34PM +0200, Anselm R Garbe wrote:
>> Do you experience this with vanilla dwm from git? If not, then it
>> might help to see your rules declaration of config.h.
>
> Yes, I use newest vanilla dwm from git without
On Wed, Jul 03, 2013 at 06:59:34PM +0200, Anselm R Garbe wrote:
> On 28 June 2013 14:25, Martin Kopta wrote:
> > If I create new window, it gets placed on the primary monitor no matter what
> > monitor is currently focused and no matter where mouse cursor is. It is
> > annoying, but (for most apps
On 28 June 2013 14:25, Martin Kopta wrote:
> If I create new window, it gets placed on the primary monitor no matter what
> monitor is currently focused and no matter where mouse cursor is. It is
> annoying, but (for most apps) I can just move the window to the prefered
> (nonprimary) monitor. But
* Martin Kopta [28.06.2013 14:26]:
> If I create new window, it gets placed on the primary monitor no matter what
>
> monitor is currently focused and no matter where mouse cursor is. It is
>
> annoying, but (for most apps) I can just move the window to the prefered
>
>
If I create new window, it gets placed on the primary monitor no matter what
monitor is currently focused and no matter where mouse cursor is. It is
annoying, but (for most apps) I can just move the window to the prefered
(nonprimary) monitor. But some apps cannot be move