"John S. Yates, Jr." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote Except for the fact that MDI document windows are not tiled they are very akin to Emacs windows.
I don't know about MDI documents. There is a huge difference between deleting other windows within a frame and maximizing a frame so it covers all the other frames that previously could be seen. In my non-Emacs programs, the word `maximize' means `occupy an entire desktop (or `workspace'; the language varies)', not `occupy one frame in a manner that also provides for a mode line and echo area' Are the displays in which MDI documents are shown like Emacs windows which exist in a frame? Can you have two or three of them in the same frame? - the clicked document grows to occupy the entire workspace of the MDI application (essentially the containing Emacs frame) When you say this, do you mean the buffer grows to occupy an entire frame? You use the word `essentially' which suggests that the `entire workspace' is something other than a frame whose size you do not change. Or do you mean the buffer (and frame dressing) grows to occupy an entire desktop and covers over all the other frames visible on that desktop? (This is what `maximize' means for my frames.) I have just changed the work area for writing this message to occupy one frame and also provide for mode line and echo area. Eleven other frames are visible on this desktop, and this user and session are running seven other desktops with thirty-seven other frames visible on them. (I had not realized how many frames I was running. Of these frames, only five are different instances of Emacs.) -- Robert J. Chassell [EMAIL PROTECTED] GnuPG Key ID: 004B4AC8 http://www.rattlesnake.com http://www.teak.cc _______________________________________________ Emacs-devel mailing list Emacs-devel@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/emacs-devel