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-0.55in Most people prefer to do their work inside a graphical
environment, and for Unix machines, that usually means using X. If
you're accustomed to the Macintosh or to Microsoft
Windows , the X Window System may take a
little getting used to, especially in how it is customized.
With the Macintosh or Microsoft Windows, you customize the environment
from within the environment: if you want to change your
background, for example, you do by clicking on the new color in some
special graphical setup program. In X, system defaults are controlled
by text files, which you edit directly--in other words, you'd type
the actual color name into a file in order to set your background to
that color.
There is no denying that this method just isn't as slick as
some commercial windowing systems. I think this tendency to remain
text-based, even in a graphical environment, has to do with the fact
that X was created by a bunch of programmers who simply
weren't trying to write software that their grandparents could use.
This tendency may change in future versions of X (at least I
hope it will), but for now, you just have to learn to deal with more
text files. It does at least give you very flexible and precise
control over your configuration.
Here are the most important files for configuring X:
All of these files should be located in your home directory,
if they exist at all.
The .xinitrc is a simple shell script that gets run when
X is invoked. It can do anything any other shell script can
do, but of course it makes the most sense to use it for starting up
various X programs and setting window system parameters. The
last command in the .xinitrc is usually the name of a window
manager to run, for example /usr/bin/X11/twm.
What sort of thing might you want to put in a .xinitrc
file? Perhaps some calls to the xsetroot program, to make your
root (background) window and mouse cursor look the way you want them
to look. Calls to xmodmap, which tells the server how to interpret the
signals from your keyboard. Any other programs you want started every
time you run X (for example, xclock).
Here is some of my .xinitrc; yours will almost certainly
look different, so this is meant only as an example:
Notice that some commands are run in the background (i.e.:
they are followed with a ``&''), while others aren't. The
distinction is that some programs will start when you start X
and keep going until you exit--these get put in the background.
Others execute once and then exit immediately. xsetroot is one
such; it just sets the root window or cursor or whatever, and then
exits.
Once the window manager has started, it will read its own init
file, which controls things like how your menus are set up, which
positions windows are brought up at, icon control, and other
earth-shakingly important issues. If you use twm, then this
file is .twmrc in your home directory. If you use fvwm,
then it's .fvwmrc, etc. I'll deal with only those two, since
they're the window managers you'll be most likely to encounter with
Linux.
Next: Twm Configuration
Up: I Gotta Be Me!
Previous: Environment Variables
Converted on:
Mon Apr 1 08:59:56 EST 1996
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