I'll poke around and see if I can find the answer, Harold. Harold L Hunt II <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Jason, > > I think this means that we have to trap a window manager > message/hint/whatever that tells us that an application is requesting > to be minimized. It is up to our internal window manager to then > perform the minimization and report that to the app that the > minimization has been performed. > > Can anyone find some information about how this is implemented? It > sounds fairly simple, so a quick example from somewhere could probably > help me get it done quickly. > > Harold > > Jason Dufair wrote: > >> Andrew DeFaria <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: >> >>>I wouldn't call it a fix, rather a default configuration. I think you >>>can put the following in your .emacs file: >>> >>>(global-set-key "\C-z" 'suspend-emacs-or-iconify-fram) >> I don't seem to have a 'suspend-emacs-or-iconify-frame. When I call >> 'suspend-emacs, I get "Suspending an emacs running under X makes no >> sense". Thanks for the suggestion. C-z does work under Linux for me, >> but no luck here. C-z does have the effect of making the cursor hollow, >> however. I suspect whatever tricks are being done with -multiwindow >> prevent iconify from behaving correctly. Thanks for checking into it. >> -- Jason Dufair - [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.dufair.org/ "Being in politics is like being a football coach. You have to be smart enough to understand the game, and dumb enough to think it's important." -- Eugene McCarthy
