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67 lines
4.0 KiB
HTML
67 lines
4.0 KiB
HTML
---
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layout: default
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title: WINGs
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---
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<h3>WINGs Is Not GNUstep</h3>
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<p>While GNUstep is our ideal development framework, it's overkill for a window manager like Window Maker. We had a
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need for a quick, lightweight toolkit to handle basic window manager tasks, which is how WINGs was born, and why it has
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become an integral part of Window Maker's core.</p>
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<p>Unlike the general uses of the GNUstep development environment, the WINGs toolkit was designed as a specific
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solution for Window Maker. It is not implemented in an object-oriented language, but was designed with OO schemas in
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mind. It is encapsulated in objects that have various methods (functions), which in turn can be accessed like real
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objects (i.e it's unknown what they contain, and they only have the interface functions to alter their data). As much
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as C will allow, that is. What really matters is that it's functional and small enough for our purposes.</p>
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<p>Surprisingly, there have been several developers who think WINGs is mature and functional enough to write full
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fledged applications with it. For developers who are interested in creating real applications, we would encourage them
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to look at GNUstep instead. GNUstep is written in Objective-C, and anyone with a solid C++ background shouldn't need
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more than an hour to begin programming in Objective-C. For more information on this, please visit the <a href=
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"http://www.gnustep.org/developers/documentation.html">GNUstep Developer Documentation</a> section.</p>
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<p>So, what does WINGs do for us, specifically? It contains many necessary widgets, such as the buttons, file browser,
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color chooser, and text editor dialog that are all used for creating the UI. It is currently missing a few important
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items, such as DnD, treeview, and application menus, but those will be integrated in future releases.</p>
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<p>One of the more important aspects of WINGs is that it now provides proplist functionality. proplist, short for
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<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Property_list">property list</a>, is what Window Maker uses to generate and
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maintain structured configuration files. This data is stored as plain ASCII text under a user's ~/GNUstep directory.
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These files are what make up the menus, the current state and appearance of the desktop, the Dock, the Clip, and the
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values set in WPrefs.</p>
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<p>As an example, here is a short snippet from the proplist version of the default menu:</p>
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<pre>
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<code>(
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Applications,
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(
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Info,
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("Info Panel", INFO_PANEL),
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(Legal, LEGAL_PANEL),
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("System Console", EXEC, xconsole),
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("System Load", SHEXEC, "xosview || xload"),
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("Process List", EXEC, "xterm -e top"),
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("Manual Browser", EXEC, xman)
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),
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(Run..., EXEC, "%a(Run,Type command to run:)"),
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...
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)
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</code>
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</pre>
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<h3>External sources of information</h3>
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<p>As this section evolves, we will be providing more documentation on the internals of WINGs. For the time being,
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developers interested in WINGs should see Alexey Voinov's <a href=
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"http://voins.program.ru/windowmaker/wingsman.html">WINGsman documentation project</a>. Starters may find <a href=
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"/WINGs_tutorial/WINGtoc.html">this tutorial</a>, which includes a library
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listing based on Voinov's work, useful. We'll try to cover some examples and/or more tutorials on how to program small
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applications in WINGs in the near future. For anyone already using WINGs for a project, please <a href=
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"{{ site.baseurl }}/lists">contact us</a>, as we'd like to get an idea of its popularity and practical uses, as well as some
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additional material to place here.</p><br />
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