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xmonad-config

xmonad-config is the xmonad configuration used by Vic Fryzel.

Introduction

If you are unfamiliar with xmonad, it is a tiling window manager that is notoriously minimal, stable, beautiful, and featureful. If you find yourself spending a lot of time organizing or managing windows, you may consider trying xmonad.

However, xmonad can be somewhat difficult to configure if you're new to Haskell or even to xmonad itself.

This project contains a completely working and very usable xmonad configuration "out of the box". If you are just starting out with xmonad, this will give you a configuration that I personally use for around 12 hours every day. Thought has been put into the colors, key bindings, layouts, and supplementary scripts to make life easier.

This project is also recommended for advanced xmonad users, who may just not want to reinvent the wheel. All source provided with this project is well documented and simple to customize.

Screenshot of xmonad-config For source code, or to contribute, see the xmonad-config project page.

Requirements

Installing requirements on Arch Linux

sudo pacman -S xmonad xmonad-contrib xmobar stalonetray dmenu scrot \
    cabal-install xcompmgr
sudo cabal update
cabal install --global yeganesh

Installing requirements on Ubuntu Linux

sudo aptitude install xmonad libghc-xmonad-contrib-dev xmobar stalonetray \
    suckless-tools scrot cabal-install xcompmgr
sudo cabal update
sudo cabal install --global yeganesh

Installation

Installing xmonad-config is a matter of backing up any xmonad configuration you may already have, cloning the git repository, and updating your PATH.

cd
mv .xmonad .xmonad.orig
git clone https://github.com/vicfryzel/xmonad-config.git .xmonad

Once xmonad-config is installed, you also need to ensure you can actually start xmonad. The mechanism to do this varies based on each environment, but here are some instructions for some common login managers.

Starting xmonad from lightdm, xdm, kdm, or gdm

ln -s ~/.xmonad/bin/xsession ~/.xsession
# Logout, login from lightdm/xdm/kdm/gdm

Starting xmonad from slim

ln -s ~/.xmonad/bin/xsession ~/.xinitrc
# Logout, login from slim

Keyboard shortcuts

After starting xmonad, use the following keyboard shortcuts to function in your new window manager. I recommend you print these out so that you don't get stranded once you logout and back in.

Key Binding Action
Alt+Shift+Return Start a terminal
Alt+Ctrl+l Lock screen
Alt+p Start dmenu. Once it comes up, type the name of a program and enter
Alt+Shift+p Take screenshot in select mode. Click or click and drag to select
Alt+Ctrl+Shift+p Take fullscreen screenshot. Supports multiple monitors
Alt+Shift+c Close focused window
Alt+Space Change workspace layout
Alt+Shift+Space Change back to default workspace layout
Alt+n Resize viewed windows to the correct size
Alt+Tab Focus next window
Alt+j Focus next window
Alt+k Focus previous window
Alt+m Focus master window
Alt+Return Swap focused window with master window
Alt+Shift+j Swap focused window with next window
Alt+Shift+k Swap focused window with previous window
Alt+h Shrink master window area
Alt+l Expand master window area
Alt+t Push floating window back into tiling
Alt+, Increment number of windows in master window area
Alt+. Decrement number of windows in master window area
Alt+q Restart xmonad. This reloads xmonad configuration, does not logout
Alt+Shift+q Quit xmonad and logout
Alt+[1-9] Switch to workspace 1-9, depending on which number was pressed
Alt+Shift+[1-9] Send focused window to workspace 1-9
Alt+w Focus left-most monitor (Xinerama screen 1)
Alt+e Focus center-most monitor (Xinerama screen 2)
Alt+r Focus right-most monitor (Xinerama screen 3)
Alt+Shift+w Send focused window to workspace on left-most monitor
Alt+Shift+e Send focused window to workspace on center-most monitor
Alt+Shift+r Send focused window to workspace on right-most monitor
Alt+Left Mouse Drag Drag focused window out of tiling
Alt+Right Mouse Drag Resize focused window, bring out of tiling if needed
Alt+Right Mouse Drag Resize focused window, bring out of tiling if needed

Personalizing or modifying xmonad-config

Once cloned, xmonad-config is laid out as follows.

All xmonad configuration is in ~/.xmonad/xmonad.hs. This includes things like key bindings, colors, layouts, etc. You may need to have some basic understanding of Haskell in order to modify this file, but most people have no problems.

Most of the xmobar configuration is in ~/.xmonad/xmobar.hs.

All scripts are in ~/.xmonad/bin/. Scripts are provided to do things like take screenshots, start the system tray, start dmenu, or fix your multi-head layout after a fullscreen application may have turned off one of the screens.

Colors set in the xmobar config and dmenu script are meant to coincide with the IR_Black terminal and vim themes.

About

My xmonad and xmobar configuration, plus necessary scripts to make things more usable.

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