What is that thing called --no-startup-id?
asked 2012-09-30 19:02:20 +0000
This post is a wiki. Anyone with karma >100 is welcome to improve it.
What is that thing called --no-startup-id
? Why and when should I use it?
asked 2012-09-30 19:02:20 +0000
This post is a wiki. Anyone with karma >100 is welcome to improve it.
What is that thing called --no-startup-id
? Why and when should I use it?
answered 2012-09-30 19:06:23 +0000
This post is a wiki. Anyone with karma >100 is welcome to improve it.
The release notes say:
i3 now supports startup notifications, meaning that during an application
starts up, the mouse cursor will change to 'watch' on the root window. Also,
the application window will appear on the workspace on which it was launched
(not on the currently focused workspace). Some applications don’t support
startup notifications. If the cursor change bothers you, turn it off by using
the --no-startup-id flag (see the userguide).
Also, the userguide says:
The --no-startup-id parameter disables startup-notification support for this
particular exec command. With startup-notification, i3 can make sure that a window
appears on the workspace on which you used the exec command. Also, it will change
the X11 cursor to watch (a clock) while the application is launching. So, if an
application is not startup-notification aware (most GTK and Qt using applications
seem to be, though), you will end up with a watch cursor for 60 seconds.
So, in short: use it if your app does not support startup notifications or if you are not starting a graphical application at all (e.g. all shell script) if the watch cursor bothers you.
answered 2012-09-30 19:04:00 +0000
This post is a wiki. Anyone with karma >100 is welcome to improve it.
Figured that Michael's answer in a comment to this question deserved its own page:
--no-startup-id
disables startup notifications for this window. They are used to properly launch windows on the right workspace when starting and to display an hourglass mouse pointer while startup is in progress. In this case you’d end up with an hourglass mouse pointer for 60 seconds.
Asked: 2012-09-30 19:02:20 +0000
Seen: 4,894 times
Last updated: Sep 30 '12