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Re: How to set a pixmap as an emacs background rather than a color?
From: |
ken |
Subject: |
Re: How to set a pixmap as an emacs background rather than a color? |
Date: |
Tue, 10 Dec 2002 11:25:35 -0500 |
I've done this in enlightenment with no mouse problems.
On an RH 7.2 machine running gnome now....
Try this:
gnome-terminal &
In the new terminal click on "Settings | Preferences | Image", click
"Background pixmap" then browser for the desired pixmap. On this same
panel you can also select the image to be shaded-- makes text easier to
read on top of some lighter images. Click "Apply", then "OK" a couple
times. As soon as you click on "Apply" the pixmap will show up in the
window. In this window, run "emacs -t $(tty)" and emacs will start in
it. I just did all of this and then used the mouse to copy-n-paste the
text in that emacs window into this email:
Welcome to GNU Emacs, one component of a Linux-based GNU system.
Get help C-h (Hold down CTRL and press h)
Undo changes C-x u Exit Emacs C-x C-c
Get a tutorial C-h t Use Info to read docs C-h i
Activate menubar M-`
(`C-' means use the CTRL key. `M-' means use the Meta (or Alt) key.
If you have no Meta key, you may instead type ESC followed by the
character.)
If an Emacs session crashed recently, type M-x recover-session RET
to recover the files you were editing.
GNU Emacs 20.7.1 (i386-redhat-linux-gnu, X toolkit)
of Mon Jul 30 2001 on stripples.devel.redhat.com
Copyright (C) 1999 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
GNU Emacs comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; type C-h C-w for full
details.
Emacs is Free Software--Free as in Freedom--so you can redistribute
copies
of Emacs and modify it; type C-h C-c to see the conditions.
Type C-h C-d for information on getting the latest version.
Seems to work fine.
hth,
ken
Tim Haynes at 14:19 (UTC-0000) on Tue, 10 Dec 2002 said:
= ken <ken@cleveland.lug.net> writes:
=
= > You can do this with enlightenment, a window manager you should have
= > installed on your system. AFAIK, you'd have to open emacs in a terminal
= > window, then set the properties on that window; this can be automated
= > into an icon of course. Enlightenment also allows "transparent" windows,
=
= No, windows allow transparent windows. It has nothing to do with E.
=
= You're recommending the OP start using e.g. Eterm or gnome-terminal with
= their transparent background abilities, that's all.
=
= > i.e., the background will be whatever wallpaper would otherwise be hidden
= > by the window. I did both of these before and they worked fine. But,
= > depending on the background image and the color(s) of the foreground
= > (here, characters), the text can be difficult to read.
=
= More to the point, you totally lose the point of having emacs being an X
= application: the mouse-interaction will be fubarred and there won't be any
= scope for a toolbar, nor even for a graphical representation of the
= menubar.
=
= Some, of course, would say this was a good thing ;8)
=
= ~Tim
=