On Mon, 9 Dec 2013 16:53:38 +
Eoff, Ullysses A ullysses.a.e...@intel.com wrote:
The ELM docs don't explain the concept... nor does a Google search AFAICT.
So what is it?
Currently, setting a window as withdrawn appears to just hide it (i.e.
elm_win_withdrawn_set(..., EINA_TRUE))...
On 09/12/13 16:53, Eoff, Ullysses A wrote:
The ELM docs don't explain the concept... nor does a Google search AFAICT.
So what is it?
Currently, setting a window as withdrawn appears to just hide it (i.e.
elm_win_withdrawn_set(..., EINA_TRUE))... so what's the point, why not use
On Mon, Dec 9, 2013 at 3:04 PM, Tom Hacohen tom.haco...@samsung.com wrote:
On 09/12/13 16:53, Eoff, Ullysses A wrote:
The ELM docs don't explain the concept... nor does a Google search AFAICT.
So what is it?
Currently, setting a window as withdrawn appears to just hide it (i.e.
At Mon, 9 Dec 2013 16:53:38 + Enlightenment developer list
enlightenment-devel@lists.sourceforge.net wrote:
The ELM docs don't explain the concept... nor does a Google search AFAICT.
So what is it?
It is a *standard* window manager thing: a withdrawn is a window that has
been unmapped
At Mon, 9 Dec 2013 15:09:44 -0200 Enlightenment developer list
enlightenment-devel@lists.sourceforge.net wrote:
On Mon, Dec 9, 2013 at 3:04 PM, Tom Hacohen tom.haco...@samsung.com wrote:
On 09/12/13 16:53, Eoff, Ullysses A wrote:
The ELM docs don't explain the concept... nor does a
On Mon, 9 Dec 2013 12:00:32 -0500 Michael Blumenkrantz
michael.blumenkra...@gmail.com said:
On Mon, 9 Dec 2013 16:53:38 +
Eoff, Ullysses A ullysses.a.e...@intel.com wrote:
The ELM docs don't explain the concept... nor does a Google search AFAICT.
So what is it?
Currently, setting