unclutter man page on SuSE

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UNCLUTTER(1X)							 UNCLUTTER(1X)

NAME
       unclutter - remove idle cursor image from screen

SYNOPSIS
       unclutter  [-display|-d	display] [-idle seconds] [-keystroke] [-jitter
       pixels] [-grab] [-noevents] [-reset] [-root] [-onescreen]  [-not]  name
       ...

DESCRIPTION
       unclutter  removes the cursor image from the screen so that it does not
       obstruct the area you are looking at after it has not moved for a given
       time.   It  does	 not  do this if the cursor is in the root window or a
       button is down.	It tries to ignore  jitter  (small  movements  due  to
       noise) if you have a mouse that twitches.

OPTIONS
       -display
	      is followed by the display to open.

       -idle  is followed by the number of seconds between polls for idleness.
	      The default is 5.

       -keystroke
	      tells unclutter not to use a timeout to determine when to remove
	      the  cursor,  but	 to  instead wait until a key has been pressed
	      (released, really).

       -jitter
	      is followed by the amount of movement of the pointer that is  to
	      be ignored and considered as random noise.  The default is 0.

       -grab  means  use  the original method of grabbing the pointer in order
	      to remove the cursor.  This often doesn't interoperate too  well
	      with some window managers.

       -noevents
	      stops  unclutter	sending	 a  pseudo  EnterNotify event to the X
	      client whose cursor has been stolen.  Sending  the  event	 helps
	      programs	like  emacs  think that they have not lost the pointer
	      focus.  This option is provided for backwards  compatibility  in
	      case some clients get upset.

       -reset resets the timeout for idleness after the cursor is restored for
	      some reason (such as a  window  being  pushed  or	 popped)  even
	      though the x y coordinates of the cursor have not changed.  Nor‐
	      mally, the cursor would immediately be removed again.

       -root  means remove the cursor even if it is on	the  root  background,
	      where in principle it should not be obscuring anything useful.

       -onescreen
	      restricts	 unclutter  to the single screen specified as display,
	      or the default screen for the display.  Normally, unclutter will
	      unclutter all the screens on a display.

       -not   is  followed  by	a list of window names where the cursor should
	      not be removed.  The first few characters of the	WM_NAME	 prop‐
	      erty  on	the  window  need to match one the listed names.  This
	      argument must be the last on the command line.

LIMITATIONS
       The -keystroke option may not work (that is, the cursor will not disap‐
       pear) with clients that request KeyRelease events.  Games and Xt appli‐
       cations using KeyUp in their translation tables are most likely to suf‐
       fer from this problem.  The most feasible solution is to extend unclut‐
       ter to use the XTest extension to get all keyboard  and	mouse  events,
       though this of course requires XTest to be in the server too.

       The  -keystroke	option	does  not  distinguish modifier keys from keys
       which actually generate characters.  If desired this  could  be	imple‐
       mented  in a simple way by using XLookupString to see if any characters
       are returned.

DIAGNOSTICS
       The message

	someone created a sub-window to my sub-window!

       means that unclutter thinks a second unclutter is running, and tried to
       steal  the  cursor  by  creating a sub-window to the sub-window already
       used to steal the cursor.  This situation quickly deteriorates  into  a
       fight  no  one can win, so it is detected when possible and the program
       gives up.

AUTHOR
       Mark M Martin. cetia 7feb1994. mmm@cetia.fr

								 UNCLUTTER(1X)
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