Hi Adam and hi to the list, The behavior you discribe is a real good thing for me. For me it is not a bug. Well I enjoy reading what is written on the first window (front) and being able to write in the window in the back. That is impossible on MS Windows for instance.
But if you want this behavior (via an option in WPrefs) it is to be asked for a new feature as far as I know. But, for the dev team, please do not remove the actual behavior : it is so great. I use it very often. For Adam : yes having the focus and raising the window is different. Hope this helps a bit. Adam Nelson <[email protected]> a écrit : >Hi guys, > >This is my first time using this mailing list, so sorry if this isn't >the right place to report this. As far as I can tell, WindowMaker >doesn't have an official bug-reporting system, so the mailing list is >the next best thing I can think of. > >I've found what I think is a bug, though maybe some people would >consider it a feature. I'm not sure if there's any settings I can >change to turn it off, though I've looked all through WPrefs and >nothing seems to work. > >Basically, when using click-to-focus, if I have one window behind >another, and I use the mousewheel or right-click on the window in the >back, that window will get focus but will not be raised. After that, >left-clicking won't raise the window at all unless I click on the >titlebar or switch focus back to another window. This is extremely >annoying, and constantly disrupts my workflow. I really like >WindowMaker, and want to keep using it, so I need to know: is there any >setting I can change to fix this, or is it just a bug? -- Richard NAGY -- To unsubscribe, send mail to [email protected].
