On 06 Apr 2006 12:47:59 +0200, Dominik Vogt wrote: > > On Thu, Apr 06, 2006 at 12:13:17PM +0200, Viktor Griph wrote: > > On Thu, 6 Apr 2006, Dominik Vogt wrote: > > > > > >Do you mean this text: > > > > > > They are searched in the reverse order stated. > > > When two conflicting styles apply to the same window, the style > > > that was changed last wins.
I think it will help if we use different terms instead of one term "style" meaning different things. I always use term "style option" to mean individual bit(s), "style" to mean named structure, and "Style" to mean fvwm command. So, how about this: When two opposite style options are specified for the same window (like Sticky and Slippery), then the last specified option wins. Example: Style gnome-terminal SloppyFocus, Slippery Style gnome-* Slippery, SloppyFocus, MouseFocus, HandleWidth 6 Style *-terminal Sticky This results to "gnome-terminal" to be Sticky and use MouseFocus. In this example, the "Style gnome-terminal SloppyFocus, Slippery" line is effectivelly optimized out and does not consume memory. Regards, Mikhael.