openbox/openbox/stacking.h
2003-09-15 03:36:15 +00:00

44 lines
1.5 KiB
C

#ifndef __stacking_h
#define __stacking_h
#include "window.h"
#include <glib.h>
#include <X11/Xlib.h>
/*! The possible stacking layers a client window can be a part of */
typedef enum {
OB_STACKING_LAYER_DESKTOP, /*!< 0 - desktop windows */
OB_STACKING_LAYER_BELOW, /*!< 1 - normal windows w/ below */
OB_STACKING_LAYER_NORMAL, /*!< 2 - normal windows */
OB_STACKING_LAYER_ABOVE, /*!< 3 - normal windows w/ above */
OB_STACKING_LAYER_TOP, /*!< 4 - always-on-top-windows (docks?) */
OB_STACKING_LAYER_FULLSCREEN, /*!< 5 - fullscreeen windows */
OB_STACKING_LAYER_INTERNAL, /*!< 6 - openbox windows/menus */
OB_NUM_STACKING_LAYERS
} ObStackingLayer;
/* list of ObWindow*s in stacking order from highest to lowest */
extern GList *stacking_list;
/*! Sets the window stacking list on the root window from the
stacking_list */
void stacking_set_list();
void stacking_add(ObWindow *win);
void stacking_add_nonintrusive(ObWindow *win);
#define stacking_remove(win) stacking_list = g_list_remove(stacking_list, win);
/*! Raises a window above all others in its stacking layer */
void stacking_raise(ObWindow *window);
/*! Lowers a window below all others in its stacking layer */
void stacking_lower(ObWindow *window);
/*! Moves a window below another if its in the same layer.
This function does not enforce stacking rules IRT transients n such, and so
it should really ONLY be used to restore stacking orders from saved sessions
*/
void stacking_below(ObWindow *window, ObWindow *below);
#endif