Date: Thu, 18 Apr 2002 14:51:53 +0200 From: Rahul Siddharthan <rsidd@online.fr> To: "f.johan.beisser" <jan@caustic.org> Cc: Mike Meyer <mwm-dated-1019525830.931e6a@mired.org>, Giorgos Keramidas <keramida@ceid.upatras.gr>, Bob Bomar <bulldog@fxp.org>, chat@FreeBSD.ORG Subject: Re: overclocking and freebsd Message-ID: <20020418145153.G64286@lpt.ens.fr> In-Reply-To: <20020418053829.X96787-100000@pogo.caustic.org>; from jan@caustic.org on Thu, Apr 18, 2002 at 05:41:05AM -0700 References: <20020418110814.A64286@lpt.ens.fr> <20020418053829.X96787-100000@pogo.caustic.org>
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f.johan.beisser said on Apr 18, 2002 at 05:41:05: [alt-tab cycling] > i believe that the apple-tab key does the same thing, on MacOS. I read a complaint somewhere about MacOS X, that this cycles through all the windows in a circular manner, ie in order of creation of the windows, which is a pain if you've got more than 3 or 4 windows open and you're actively using only 2 of them (so you want alt-tab to go to the second window, but another alt-tab to return to the first; if you have 10 open windows you don't want to cycle through all 10 to get back to the first.) I don't know whether this is true. KDE, Sawfish and (I believe) Windows do the sensible thing: they reorder the windows according to last usage, so you move through a "stack" with recently-focussed windows on top, and not through a closed chain of fixed order. - Rahul To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-chat" in the body of the message
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