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Stumpwm is a tiling window manager written entirely in Common Lisp. It attempts to be highly customizable while relying entirely on the keyboard for input.

4.78571
   
  5 reviews  |  46 users  |  13,764 lines of code  |  0 current contributors  |  Analyzed 4 days ago
 
 
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wmii is a dynamic window manager for X11. It supports classic and dynamic window management with extended keyboard, mouse, and filesystem based remote control. It replaces the workspace paradigm with a new tagging approach. Its minimalist philosophy attempts to not exceed 10,000 lines of code ... [More] (including all shipped utilities and libraries), to enforce simplicity and clarity. [Less]

4.3913
   
  0 reviews  |  42 users  |  29,758 lines of code  |  5 current contributors  |  Analyzed about 1 year ago
 
 

ratpoison is a Window Manager that puts that sick little rodent out of its misery. Enjoy ratpoison's smooth keyboard handling and slick performance. Don't worry about dependancies, 'cause there ain't none! And best of all, its GNOME incompliant!

4.625
   
  0 reviews  |  14 users  |  14,981 lines of code  |  4 current contributors  |  Analyzed 2 days ago
 
 

Sawfish is an extensible window manager using a Lisp-based scripting language called Librep -- all window decorations are configurable and all user-interface policy is controlled through the extension language.

4.25
   
  0 reviews  |  10 users  |  73,727 lines of code  |  3 current contributors  |  Analyzed 5 days ago
 
 

CLFSWM is a 100% Common Lisp X11 window manager (based on Tinywm and Stumpwm. Many thanks to them). It can be driven only with the keyboard or with the mouse.

5.0
 
  1 review  |  4 users  |  22,424 lines of code  |  5 current contributors  |  Analyzed about 15 hours ago
 
 
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X Python Bindings. Python bindings to libxcb.

5.0
 
  0 reviews  |  3 users  |  2,585 lines of code  |  0 current contributors  |  Analyzed 10 days ago
 
 

Notion is a tiling, tabbed window manager for the X window system: * Tiling: you divide the screen into non-overlapping 'tiles'. Every window occupies one tile, and is maximized to it * Tabbing: a tile may contain multiple windows - they will be 'tabbed' * Static: ... [More] most tiled window managers are 'dynamic', meaning they automatically resize and move around tiles as windows appear and disappear. Notion, by contrast, does not automatically change the tiling. You're in control. Features include: * Workspaces: each workspace has its own tiling * Multihead: the mod_xinerama plugin provides very nice dual-monitor support * RandR: mod_xrandr expands on mod_xinerama and picks up changes in the randr configuration without the need for restarting Notion [Less]

4.0
   
  0 reviews  |  3 users  |  74,234 lines of code  |  5 current contributors  |  Analyzed 10 days ago
 
 

XWEM is an attempt to build the ideal desktop. It is not a secret that Emacs is the most powerful environment one has used, but it lacks some real integration with desktop because it can't have control over everything. XWEM will try to break this barrier.

4.0
   
  1 review  |  3 users  |  37,824 lines of code  |  0 current contributors  |  Analyzed 7 months ago
 
 

DSWM (Deep Space Window Manager) is a tiling keyboard-driven X11 window manager. It is based on StumpWM code and is written entirely in Common Lisp and oriented for good usability with minimum startup configuration and good integration with Emacs. The project is under hard development, so it has many experimental features.

0
 
  0 reviews  |  2 users  |  15,124 lines of code  |  3 current contributors  |  Analyzed 10 days ago
 
 

Aside from some different copyright statements, both Motif and OpenMotif share the same functionality and source code. The primary difference is the software license for each piece of software. OpenMotif source code and binaries are distributed royalty free under The Open Group Public License as ... [More] long as the underlying operating system is open sourced. Motif is made available under the standard Open Group software licenses and has both source code and royalty fees. In short, if you are using Linux, or some other open source operating environment, Motif is open and freely available, hence the use of "OpenMotif". [Less]

0
 
  0 reviews  |  2 users  |  635,929 lines of code  |  0 current contributors  |  Analyzed 6 days ago
 
 
 
 

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