Hi all, Is there a command line command that controls which virtual X screen a person is viewing? Sure I can click on one of the 4 virtual X screens but can I control that from the command line. Thanks, Jerry
> Is there a command line command that controls which virtual X screen > a person is viewing? > > Sure I can click on one of the 4 virtual X screens but can I > control that > from the command line.Are you talking about the workspaces provided by the default Gnome desktop manager? If so, CTRL-ALT-<arrow_keys> should do what you want. Alfred
xvkbd is an X11 utility that send event to X application. You can script your events. Just send the good key or mouse event to the good application. Alain Regards On 9/24/07, Jerry Geis <geisj at pagestation.com> wrote:> Hi all, > > Is there a command line command that controls which virtual X screen > a person is viewing? > > Sure I can click on one of the 4 virtual X screens but can I control that > from the command line. > > Thanks, > > Jerry > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS at centos.org > http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos >-- Alain Spineux aspineux gmail com May the sources be with you
>> Is there a command line command that controls which virtual X screen>> a person is viewing? >> >> Sure I can click on one of the 4 virtual X screens but can I >> control that >> from the command line. >Are you talking about the workspaces provided by the default Gnome >desktop manager? If so, CTRL-ALT-<arrow_keys> should do what you want Ok - I didnt realize it was called workspace, but yes that is it. But - what I want is a command line program that I can execute to show workspace 3. The sometime later execute a command line program to show workspace 1. Jerry
Reasonably Related Threads
- my centos switched alone its root fs to read-only
- wich filesystem to store > 250E6 small files in same or hashed dire
- Taking file from pyhsical disk to new virtual disk
- Dual boot box: WinXP & CentOS 5: Impossible to restore WinXP?
- controlling module load order