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ICEWM(1)			 User Commands			      ICEWM(1)

   NAME
	icewm -	lightweight X11	window manager

   SYNOPSIS
       icewm [OPTIONS]

   DESCRIPTION
       icewm is	a small	and fast window	manager	for the	X11 window system.  It
       is best started by icewm-session(1), which also starts icewmbg(1).

       icewm is	called re-parenting, because it	draws frames around
       application windows.  Drag this frame with the mouse, to	move or	resize
       a window.

       Because windows may overlap, icewm is also a stacking window manager.
       Many windows may	exist, some hidden behind others.

       icewm supports a	configurable number of virtual desktops.  These	are
       called workspaces. Related windows are grouped on a dedicated
       workspace.  By switching	between	workspaces, the	user can attend	to
       different tasks,	while keeping oversight.  This is supported by a task
       bar and a pager.

       The installation	comes with several themes. Choose a theme via a	menu.
       Install extra themes automatically with the --install option.

       icewm is	compliant with the ICCCM and EWMH window manager
       specifications.

   PROGRAMS
       The icewm package includes several programs:

       icewm(1)
	   The	actual	window	manager.  It  positions	application windows on
	   screen and decorates	them with borders. It gives input focus	to the
	   current active application. icewm supports different	 focus	modes,
	   which  are explained	below. It draws	a small	task bar at the	bottom
	   of the screen, that gives  easy  access  to	programs,  to  virtual
	   desktops,  to active	applications, and to a small set of monitoring
	   applets.

       icewmbg(1)
	   The background setting application. It can assign plain  background
	   color  or  images  in  different formats to the X background.  Each
	   workspace   can   have   its	  own	background.	It    supports
	   semitransparency.  Semitransparent  background image	and colour can
	   be  configured.  When  the  background  image  has	changed	  then
	   icewmbg(1)  can  be	notified to update the background.  Multi-head
	   monitor setups are fully supported.	See the	icewmbg(1).

       icewm-session(1)
	   icewm-session(1) is	the  preferred	program	 to  start  the	 IceWM
	   system.   It	 first loads additional	environment variables from the
	   optional env	file. Then it starts icewmbg(1)	 and  icewm.  It  also
	   runs	 the  startup  script and implements basic session management.
	   On  termination  the	 shutdown  script  will	 be  run  first,  then
	   icewm-session(1)    will    terminate    icewm    and   icewmbg(1).
	   icewm-session(1) will also start the	optional  icesound(1)  if  you
	   give	it the --sound option.	See icewm-session(1).

       icesh(1)
	   A  powerful	tool to	control	window properties and to interact with
	   the window manager. It is typically	used  in  shell	 scripts.  See
	   icesh(1).

       icehelp(1)
	   A  small  document  browser	that  is  used by icewm	to display the
	   'IceWM manual' and some man pages.

       icewmhint(1)
	   A utility for passing IceWM-specific	window options to icewm.   The
	   options are used to configure the first application that is started
	   subsequently.  See icewmhint(1).

       icesound(1)
	   Plays  audio	 files	on  GUI	 events	 that are raised by icewm.  It
	   supports ALSA, AO and OSS.  See the icesound(1) man page.

       icewm-menu-fdo(1)
	   Generate  an	 icewm	menu  with  executable	desktop	  applications
	   according  to  XDG  specifications.	See  the icewm-menu-fdo(1) man
	   page.

       icewm-set-gnomewm(1)
	   Configures GNOME to start IceWM instead of its own WM.

   OPTIONS
   COMMON OPTIONS
       Each of the IceWM executables supports the following options:

       -c, --config=FILE
	   Use FILE as the source of configuration options.  By	default	 icewm
	   looks  for  a file named preferences.  This is a readable text file
	   that	can be modified	with the help of a text	editor.

       -t, --theme=NAME
	   Use NAME as the name	of the icewm theme to use.   A	theme  defines
	   the look and	feel of	icewm, like colors, fonts and buttons.

       -d, --display=DISPLAY
	   Connect  to	the X11	server on DISPLAY.  By default the environment
	   variable "DISPLAY" is used.

       -o, --output=FILE
	   Redirect all	output	to  FILE.   A  leading	tilde  or  environment
	   variable is expanded.

       --sync
	   This	 option	 specifies  to	use a slower synchronous communication
	   mode	with the X11 server.  This is irrelevant for normal use.

       -h, --help
	   Gives a complete list of all	 the  available	 command-line  options
	   with	some very brief	explanation.

       -V, --version
	   Shows the software release version for this program.

   ICEWM OPTIONS
       The icewm program supports some additional options:

       -a, --alpha
	   Use	a  32-bit visual for translucency. This	can also be set	in the
	   preferences file as "Alpha=1".

       --replace
	   Instructs icewm to replace an existing  window  manager.   Provided
	   that	the window manager being replaced is ICCCM 2.0 compliant, once
	   it  notices	that it	is to be replaced it will cease	operations and
	   typically stop execution.  This allows icewm	to establish itself as
	   the only active window manager.

       -r, --restart
	   Tell	icewm to restart itself. This reloads the  configuration  from
	   file. If no window manager is active, then it starts	one.

       -s, --splash=IMAGE
	   Briefly  show  IMAGE	 on startup in the center of the screen.  This
	   can also be set in the preferences file as Splash="image.jpg".

       --configured
	   Shows a list	of configuration options that were enabled when	 icewm
	   was compiled	from source code.  This	can be helpful if one suspects
	   some	functionality may be missing.

       --directories
	   Gives a list	of directories where icewm will	look for configuration
	   data.  This list is printed in the actual order in which icewm uses
	   it to search	for configuration files.

       -l, --list-themes
	   icewm will search all the configuration directories for theme files
	   and print a list of all found themes.

       -i, --install=THEME
	   Install  THEME from icewm-extra and exit. When THEME	is list, print
	   a listing of	available themes to install. This option requires  the
	   presence of the lzip, tar and wget or curl commands.

       -p, --postpreferences
	   This	gives a	long list of all the internal icewm options with their
	   actual  values  after  icewm	has processed all of the configuration
	   and theme files. In some advanced scenarios this can	be helpful  to
	   inspect which configuration was chosen or whether option formatting
	   was correct.

       --rewrite-preferences
	   Overwrite  an  existing  preferences	 file  with  an	 icewm default
	   preferences,	but preserve all modifications	insofar	 they  deviate
	   from	the defaults.

       --extensions
	   Give	a list of the current X	extensions, their versions and status.

       --trace=conf,font,icon,prog,systray
	   Enable  tracing  of	the paths that are used	to load	configuration,
	   fonts, icons, executed programs, and/or system tray applets.

   USAGE
   TASKBAR
       On startup icewm	launches the task bar at the  bottom  of  the  screen.
       The task	bar consists from left to right	 of the	following components:

       The Menu	button in the lower left corner	gives access to	the icewm root
       menu.  This  menu has sub-menus to start	applications, to control icewm
       settings, and the icewm Logout menu.

       The Show	Desktop	button unmaps all application windows to fully uncover
       the desktop.

       The Window List Menu button gives access	to  a  menu  with  a  list  of
       active  windows for the current workspace and a list of workspaces with
       sub-menus for their active application windows.

       The Toolbar is a	list of	icons for applications that are	defined	in the
       toolbar configuration file.

       The Workspace Pane shows	one button for each  workspace.	  The  current
       workspace is indicated by a pressed button.  Clicking another workspace
       switches	to that	workspace.  Press left mouse, then the Shift key, then
       release	the  left  mouse,  takes the current window to that workspace.
       Press left, then	Alt, then release left,	moves only the focused	window
       to other	workspace, without changing the	current	workspace.

       The  workspaces	are defined in the preferences file.  To change	a name
       for only	this session, double-click, edit the name and hit Enter.  When
       "PagerShowPreview" is turned on,	a small	graphical window  summary  for
       each workspace is shown.	They support drag-and-drop: dragging a Firefox
       tab  to	a  workspace  button  changes  the  current  workspace.	  Then
       releasing it moves that tab to a	new window in that workspace.

       The Task	Pane consists of a list	of wide	buttons	for  each  application
       that  is	 running  on  the  current  workspace,	or  all	 workspaces if
       "TaskBarShowAllWindows=1".  Each	task button shows the application icon
       and the application title.  The active application is  indicated	 by  a
       pressed	button.	  This	is  the	 application  that  has	 input	focus.
       Pressing	another	button activates that application: it  is  brought  to
       the  foreground	and  receives  input  focus.   Other  mouse controlled
       activities on the window	buttons	are: dragging window buttons with  the
       left  mouse  button  to	rearrange  the	order, closing the application
       window with "Alt" + middle button, lowering the application window with
       "Ctrl" +	middle button, or  bringing  the  application  window  to  the
       current	   workspace	with	"Shift"	   +	middle	  button    if
       "TaskBarShowAllWindows=1".

       If there	are not	many application buttons then a	stretch	of plain  task
       bar  is	visible.  Clicking on it with the right	mouse button gives the
       task bar	menu.  Even with a full	task pane, this	menu  can  be  usually
       accessed	by right-clicking the bottom right corner of the taskbar.

       The Tray	Applet shows system tray objects.

       The APM Applet shows battery power status.

       The  Net	Applet shows network activity.	Network	devices	to monitor are
       given by	the "NetworkStatusDevice" option.

       The Memory Applet monitors memory usage.

       The CPU Applet monitors processor utilization.

       The Mailbox Applet monitors mailbox status changes.   See  the  section
       MAILBOX MONITORING below.

       The  Clock Applet shows the current time	and date.  It is configured by
       the "TimeFormat"	option.

       The Task	Bar Collapse button collapses the task bar and hides it.

       Not all icewm applets may show up on the	task bar.  They	must have been
       enabled during configuration of the icewm software.   Their  appearance
       is also controlled by options in	the preferences	file.

   INPUT FOCUS
       Of  all visible windows only one	can be the active window.  This	is the
       window that has input focus.  It	is the primary	receiver  of  keyboard
       and  mouse  events and hence one	can interact with the application that
       created that window.  A primary task of a window	manager	 is  to	 allow
       the  user to switch input focus between different windows.  The primary
       means to	do this	is the mouse pointer.  By  moving  the	mouse  pointer
       over  the  screen  to another window, and perhaps also by clicking on a
       window, input focus can be directed.

       The "FocusMode" option controls the way	icewm  gives  input  focus  to
       applications.   It is initialized by the	focus_mode configuration file.
       The focus mode is set via the Focus menu.   icewm  supports  six	 focus
       models:

       1. Click-to-focus
	   The default focus mode.  In this mode changing input	focus requires
	   to  click a window with the left mouse button. The window is	raised
	   if needed.  When an application requests focus its task pane	button
	   flashes.  This gives	the option to honor this request or to	ignore
	   it.	 When  a  new  application  window  appears  it	 automatically
	   receives focus.  Also when a	hidden application raises to the front
	   it receives focus.

       2. Sloppy-mouse-focus
	   Sets	input focus merely by moving the mouse pointer over a  window.
	   It  is  called  sloppy, because if the mouse	then leaves the	window
	   and moves to	the desktop background the input  focus	 remains  with
	   the last active window.  When a window receives focus it is raised.
	   When	an application requests	focus its task pane button flashes.  A
	   new	application  or	 an  application  that	raises	to  the	 front
	   automatically receives focus.

       3. Explicit-focus
	   Focus is even more user-controlled  than  Click-to-focus.   When  a
	   window receives focus it is not raised by default, unless the frame
	   border is clicked.  No flashing occurs when an application requests
	   focus.   When  a new	application window appears it does not receive
	   focus.  Only	by explicit clicking on	a window is focus directed.

       4. Strict-mouse-focus
	   Like	 Sloppy	 but  focus  remains  with  the	  last	 window.   New
	   applications	 don't	receive	 focus	and  are  mapped  behind other
	   windows.  When an application raises	to the front it	still does not
	   get focus.

       5. Quiet-sloppy-focus
	   Like	Sloppy but no disturbing flashing occurs on the	task bar  when
	   an application requests focus.

       6. Custom-mode
	   A  focus  mode  that	 is  defined  by  the  following  ten options:
	   "ClickToFocus",    "FocusOnAppRaise",     "RequestFocusOnAppRaise",
	   "RaiseOnFocus",    "RaiseOnClickClient",   "FocusChangesWorkspace",
	   "FocusOnMap",  "FocusOnMapTransient",  "FocusOnMapTransientActive",
	   "MapInactiveOnTop".

	   All non-Custom focus	modes override these ten options.

       Apart  from  the	mouse, icewm supports changing input focus in two ways
       by keyboard.  By	pressing "Alt+Esc" or "Alt+Shift+Esc", input focus  is
       immediately  changed  to	 the  next  or	previous window, which will be
       raised to make it fully visible.	The other method  involves  the	 quick
       switch.

   QUICK SWITCH
       The  QuickSwitch	 is  a	means  to quickly and interactively change the
       input focus to  another	window.	  It  is  activated  by	 pressing  the
       "Alt+Tab"  or "Alt+Shift+Tab" key combination.  A window	pops up	in the
       centre of the screen with a list	of windows to choose from.   A	narrow
       band indicates a	selection: the candidate window	that will be activated
       to receive input	focus when the Alt key is released.

       The  selection can be changed by	repeatedly pressing the	Tab key, while
       keeping the Alt key down. If a Shift key	is also	down, the direction of
       traversal is reversed. Or use the scroll	wheel of the  mouse.   Or  use
       one of the digit	keys to	select the corresponding window	from the list.
       Arrow keys are also supported, as well as the Home and End key.

       To  make	a selected window the active window, just release the Alt key,
       or hit the Return key, or click on  it.	 To  cancel  the  QuickSwitch,
       press Escape or click outside of	the QuickSwitch	window.

       A  selected  window  can	 be  closed by Delete, "Alt+F4", or the	middle
       mouse button.  While the	QuickSwitch window is up, one can still	change
       workspace with the usual	workspace hotkeys.

       The QuickSwitch has two distinct	modes: vertical	and  horizontal.   The
       window  list  can  include  all	windows	 or  be	limited	to the current
       workspace. There	is an option to	raise the selected candidate.  See the
       many preferences	available for the QuickSwitch.

   WINDOW PLACEMENT
       A second	important task of a window manager is to place new windows  on
       the screen.  By default icewm chooses a placement with minimal overlap,
       but   this   is	determined  by	the  "SmartPlacement"  option  in  the
       preferences file.  If "SmartPlacement" is turned	off then  windows  are
       placed  in sequence from	left to	right and top to bottom.  One can also
       turn on "ManualPlacement".  Then	new windows appear  initially  in  the
       top  left  corner  and the mouse	cursor changes into a fist.  By	moving
       the fist	cursor to a suitable location and clicking the new window will
       appear at the mouse click location.

   WINDOW LAYERS
       Windows can overlap.  Which window appears  on  top  is	determined  by
       three  features.	 Newer windows appear over older windows.  By clicking
       on a window it is raised	to the top.  But both  are  overruled  by  the
       window layer.  Windows can be placed in different layers	via the	Layers
       menu.  Click with the right mouse button	on the window frame and	select
       Layer.	From  there  choose  one  of  seven  window layers.  These are
       ordered from higher to lower.  Windows in  higher  layers  appear  over
       windows in lower	layers.

       There  are  16 layers in	total, but most	are seldom or never used. They
       are numbered from zero for the lowest layer to fifteen for the topmost.
       Their names with	their layer number are:	Desktop	(0), Below (2),	Normal
       (4), OnTop (6), Dock (8), AboveDock (10), Menu  (12),  Fullscreen  (14)
       and AboveAll (15). By default every window appears in the Normal	layer.
       Then  Below  and	OnTop are used frequently to position windows below or
       above most others. Icewm	 menus	appear	in  the	 Menu  layer  and  the
       Fullscreen  layer  is  reserved for windows in the fullscreen mode. The
       default layer for each application can be set with a winoption.

   DOCKED APPLICATIONS
       Icewm has native	support	for Window Maker  dockapps.   It  has  a  Dock
       container  called  DockApps,  which appears automatically when dockapps
       are started. The	position and layer of this container are controlled by
       the "DockApps" preference. It is	a space	separated  list	 of  keywords.
       The  keywords  "right,  left, center, down, high" control the position,
       while "above, dock, ontop, normal, below, desktop" set the layer.  When
       DockApps	 is set	to the empty string, support for dockapps is disabled.
       The dockapps in the container can be controlled using  the  mouse  when
       the  Ctrl  key  is pressed down.	Drag with the left mouse button, close
       with the	middle mouse button, select a menu with	the right mouse	button
       and rotate with the scroll wheel.

       If maximizing a window should not overlap the DockApps  container,  put
       it in the dock layer and	set the	preference LimitByDockLayer=1.

   TABBED WINDOWS
       A window	frame may contain multiple client windows. Only	one client can
       be  visible, while the others are hidden. This is called	tabbing.  This
       can be helpful to reduce	the number of visible  windows.	 To  create  a
       tab,  drag  the	title  bar with	the middle mouse button, while holding
       down a shift key, onto the title	bar of another frame.  The  two	 title
       bars  will  start to flash to indicate that they	can merge. Release the
       mouse button to merge the client	of  the	 upper	window	to  the	 lower
       frame.	Now  the  lower	frame will have	multiple clients, called tabs.
       The title bar will show a vertical bar with  triple  dots  to  indicate
       this.  To change	the current tab	either:

          Click on the	triple dots next to the	vertical bar.

          Use "KeyWinNext=Alt+F6" to select the next tab.

          Use "KeyWinPrev=Alt+Shift+F6" for the previous tab.

          Use the QuickSwitch.

          Use the window list window.

          Use a submenu in the	window menu.

       To    change    the   mouse   binding   for   creating	tabs,	modify
       MouseWinTabbing="Shift+Pointer_Button2".	  Another  useful  setting  is
       MouseWinTabbing="Pointer_Button1".

       "Alt+F4"	closes all tabs. To close just the active tab add to "keys":

	   key "Ctrl+Shift+F4"	   icesh -f close

       To move the active tab to its own window	frame by key, add to "keys":

	   key "Alt+u"		   icesh -f untab

       To open all chrome windows in the same frame add	this to	"winoptions":

	   google-chrome.frame:	   chrome

   WORKSPACES
       icewm   supports	  multiple  virtual  desktops  called  workspaces.   A
       workspace is like a screen where	a subset of  all  application  windows
       are  mapped.  Thanks to multiple	workspaces we can more easily manage a
       large number of applications.  The number of workspaces and their names
       are configurable	in the preferences file	through	 the  "WorkspaceNames"
       option.	 By default four workspaces are	created	with the names 1, 2, 3
       and 4 thus:

	WorkspaceNames=" 1 ", "	2 ", " 3 ", " 4	"

       This syntax is typical for icewm	options	that receive multiple  values.
       It is a list of comma-separated values each of which can	be quoted.

       The  workspaces	are  visible  on  the  toolbar.	  One  can switch to a
       different workspace by pressing the workspace button  in	 the  toolbar,
       but  after  becoming  familiar  with the	'keyboard shortcuts' below one
       will want to use	a hotkey to choose a workspace.	 If  the  "EdgeSwitch"
       options	 is   enabled	in  the	 preferences  file  (with  sub-options
       "HorizontalEdgeSwitch" and "VerticalEdgeSwitch")	then one can  move  to
       the  next  or previous workspace	by moving the mouse to the edge	of the
       screen.	The "ContinuousEdgeSwitch" option enables continuous  movement
       to  subsequent  workspaces.  The	"EdgeSwitchDelay" option says how long
       to wait before a	change of workspace occurs.

       To move an application window to	a different workspace one  can	use  a
       keyboard	 shortcut.  Another option is to select	the Move To submenu in
       the window menu of the window frame.

   DRAG	AND DROP
       The task	bar supports drag and drop  operations.	 When  a  drag	is  in
       progress,  the destination window can be	activated by hovering the drag
       icon over the task button for that window.  Alternatively, the  current
       workspace  can  be  changed  by hovering	the drag icon over the desired
       workspace  button.   When  edge	switching  is  enabled,	 the   current
       workspace  can  also be changed by bringing the drag icon to the	screen
       edge.

   ADDRESS BAR
       The task	bar contains a command-line prompt called the address bar,  if
       EnableAddressBar=1. It is always	shown when ShowAddressBar=1, otherwise
       it  is  activated  by KeySysAddressBar="Alt+Ctrl+space".	 In it a shell
       command	can   be   typed.   On	 Enter	 it   is   executed   by   the
       AddressBarCommand="/bin/sh".  On	Control+Enter this command is executed
       in  a new terminal as given by TerminalCommand.	Escape cancels editing
       the address bar command.

       Commands	are executed relative to the working directory of icewm.  This
       is shown	by "pwd". Change it with "cd".	Without	argument "cd" defaults
       to the home directory. With one argument	it is changed.	This  argument
       is expanded when	it starts with a dollar	or tilde.  When	it is equal to
       "-", it reverts to the previous directory.

       The  address  bar has a history that is navigable by Up and Down.  This
       history is saved	in  a  file  ahistory  in  your	 icewm	directory  and
       restored	when icewm starts.

       Completion  is  supported  using	 Tab or	Ctrl+I.	The leading command is
       completed from directories in  your  PATH,  while  file	arguments  are
       expanded	 from  the  location in	the file system. In addition usernames
       and environment variables can also  be  expanded.  For  example,	 "echo
       $TMP"  and  Tab may expand to "echo $TMPDIR" and	"echo ~ro" and Tab may
       expand to "echo ~root".

       The address bar implements cut/copy/paste and these editing operations:

       Ctrl+a: select all
       Ctrl+backslash: deselect	all
       Ctrl+u: delete selected or to line start
       Ctrl+v: paste selected
       Ctrl+w: delete selected or previous word
       Ctrl+x: cut selection
       Ctrl+c: copy selection
       Ctrl+i: completion
       Ctrl+Left: back a word
       Ctrl+Right: forward a word
       Ctrl+Shift+Backspace: delete to beginning
       Ctrl+Shift+Delete: delete to end
       Ctrl+Delete: delete word
       Ctrl+Backspace: delete previous word
       Shift+Delete: cut selection
       Shift+Insert: paste selected
       Tab: completion
       Left: move cursor left
       Right: move cursor right
       Home: move cursor to line start
       End: move cursor	to line	end
       Delete: delete next character
       Backspace: delete previous character

   WINDOW LIST
       The window list window  shows  a	 list  of  all	workspaces.  For  each
       workspace  it shows the window titles of	the windows that are mapped on
       it. The bottom entry  reads  "All  Workspaces".	It  holds  the	sticky
       windows.	These windows are mapped in all	workspaces.

       The  window list	window is normally hidden. Choose one of the following
       four methods to make it visible:

          Select the bottom window list menu entry.

          Press the "KeySysWindowList=Ctrl+Alt+Esc" key.

          Press the right Windows key if "Win95Keys=1"

          Press the "DesktopWinListButton=2" mouse button in the root window.

          Press the middle mouse button in a workspace	 button	 on  the  task
	   bar.

       A  single-click on a window entry selects it. A group of	windows	can be
       selected	by "Shift+Pointer_Button1" or by dragging with the left	 mouse
       button.	Use "Ctrl+Pointer_Button1" to individually select windows in a
       multi-selection.	A right	mouse click over a selection  will  popup  the
       system  menu  for this selection.  To close the selected	windows, press
       "Delete". Press "Shift+Delete" to forcefully kill  them.	  Right	 mouse
       click  below  the  sticky  windows  for	a  menu	 with window arranging
       actions.

       Double-click on a workspace to switch to	it.  Double-click on a	window
       to  activate it.	 Or navigate by	arrow keys and press Enter.  The space
       bar toggles a selection of a window. "Ctrl+a" and "Ctrl+/" will	select
       the  entire list	of windows. "Ctrl+\\" deselects	everything.  Press the
       first letter of a window	title to navigate to  it  and  select  it.  If
       titles  of  multiple windows start with the same	letter then repeatedly
       pressing	the first letter cycles	over those  windows.   "Home"  selects
       the  first entry	and "End" the last. "PageUp" and "PageDown" move up or
       down by ten entries. Combine this with the  "Shift"  key	 to  extend  a
       selection over the range	of motion.

   SYSTEM DIALOG
       The system dialog offers	quick access to	a set of general controls.  It
       can  lock  the  screen,	suspend	the system, logout or cancel a pending
       logout, reboot the system, shutdown the system, show the	 window	 list,
       restart icewm, show the about dialog, reload the	winoptions file	or the
       keys  file.  It is activated by KeySysDialog="Ctrl+Alt+Del".  To	cancel
       it, hit the Escape key.

   MAILBOX MONITORING
       The task	bar can	show one or more icons to  reflect  the	 status	 of  a
       mailbox.	 The  mailbox  can  be	a  local  file or a remote POP or IMAP
       account.	 For  this  a  couple  of  options   must   be	 set.	First,
       TaskBarShowMailboxStatus	must be	enabled, which it is by	default.  Then
       the  location  of  the  mailbox	must  be  set.	 Icewm first looks for
       MailBoxPath  in	preferences.  If  this	is  unset,  it	looks  at  the
       environment variables "MAILPATH"	and "MAIL".  MailBoxPath may contain a
       space-separated	list  of  mailboxes,  while  "MAILPATH"	 may contain a
       colon-separated list of mailboxes.  If a	mailbox	starts	with  a	 slash
       "/",  then it is	a local	file, otherwise	a URL.	These are six examples
       of possible mailboxes:

	   file:///var/spool/mail/captnmark
	   file:///home/captnmark/Maildir/
	   pop3://markus:%2f%40%3a@maol.ch/
	   pop3s://markus:password@pop.gmail.com/
	   imap://mathias@localhost/INBOX.Maillisten.icewm-user
	   imaps://mathias:password@imap.gmail.com/INBOX

       The POP3S and IMAPS schemes use "openssl" for TLS/SSL encryption.  Note
       that for	IceWM to access	Gmail you  must	 first	configure  your	 Gmail
       account	to enable POP3 or IMAP access.	Make sure you have secure file
       permissions on your IceWM  preferences  file  and  the  directory  that
       contains	it.

       Reserved	 characters  in	 the password, like slash, at and colon	can be
       specified using escape sequences	with a hexadecimal encoding  like  %2f
       for  the	 slash	or  %40	 for  the at sign.  For	example, to hex-encode
       "!p@a%s&s~" use this Perl snippet:

	   perl	-e 'foreach(split("", $ARGV[0])) { printf "%%%02x", ord($_); };
	   print "\n";'	'!p@a%s&s~'

       Which will print:

	   %21%40%23%24%25%5e%26%2a%7e

       This is the hex-encoded password. However, it  is  unwise  to  store  a
       password	in your	preferences. Consider a	wallet extension for IceWM.

       IceWM  will  check a mailbox periodically. The period in	seconds	can be
       set by the MailCheckDelay option, which is 30 seconds by	default.

       Whenever	new mail arrives, the mailbox icon will	be  highlighted.   The
       color  will  indicate  if  the  mail has	been read or not. Hovering the
       mouse over the mailbox icon will	show a tooltip with more  details.   A
       command	can be also be run on new mail.	Set the	NewMailCommand option.
       Its environment will have these variables set by	IceWM:

       ICEWM_MAILBOX
	   The mailbox index number of MailBoxPath starting from 1.

       ICEWM_COUNT
	   The total number of messages	in this	mailbox.

       ICEWM_UNREAD
	   The number of unread	messages in this mailbox.

   KEYBOARD LAYOUT SWITCHING
       To control keyboard layouts on the task bar, define in preferences  the
       option  KeyboardLayouts	to  a  comma-separated	list of	your preferred
       keyboard	layouts. For example:

	 KeyboardLayouts = "de", "fr", "jp"

       A keyboard layout can simply be a name. Usually this  is	 a  two-letter
       country	code.  See the directory /usr/share/X11/xkb/symbols for	a list
       of available keyboard layouts for your system.  If it  is  enclosed  in
       double  quotes,	it  can	also be	a space-separated list of command-line
       arguments to an invocation of the "setxkbmap" program.

       The first layout	is the	default.  It  will  be	installed  when	 icewm
       starts.	The task bar will show the current keyboard layout. If an icon
       can  be	found  for the first two letters of the	layout,	then that icon
       will be shown. Otherwise	the first two  letters	of  the	 name  of  the
       layout will be shown.

       Click on	the current keyboard layout to cycle through all the available
       keyboard	 layouts,  or  use the KeySysKeyboardNext key.	Click with the
       right mouse button to open a menu of all	available keyboard layouts.

       It is also possible to configure	a default  keyboard  layout  for  each
       program	individually in	the icewm-winoptions(5)	file.  Whenever	such a
       program receives	 input	focus,	icewm  will  install  this  configured
       keyboard	layout automatically. The keyboard status on the task bar will
       be updated to reflect this.

       Please note that	for keyboard layout switching to work, the "setxkbmap"
       program	must  be  installed.  To  see  your  current  keyboard	layout
       settings, do "setxkbmap -query".

   KEYBOARD SHORTCUTS
       icewm supports a	large number of	hotkeys	 to  activate  some  behaviour
       with  a	single	key  combination.   These  are all configurable	in the
       preferences file.  Here we give their  preferences  name,  followed  by
       their default value in double quotes, and a short descriptions of their
       effect.

       Note  that  all	use  one  or  more  key	 modifiers. Icewm supports the
       following modifiers: Alt,  AltGr,  Ctrl,	 Hyper,	 Meta,	Shift,	Super.
       Setting	ModSuperIsCtrlAlt=1  makes  the	 Super	modifier  an alias for
       Ctrl+Alt.

       KeyWinRaise="Alt+F1"
	   Raises the window that currently has	input focus.

       KeyWinOccupyAll="Alt+F2"
	   Makes the active window occupy all workspaces.

       KeyWinLower="Alt+F3"
	   Lowers the window that currently has	input focus.

       KeyWinClose="Alt+F4"
	   Closes the active window.

       KeyWinRestore="Alt+F5"
	   Restores the	active window to its visible state.

       KeyWinNext="Alt+F6"
	   Switches focus to the next window.

       KeyWinPrev="Alt+Shift+F6"
	   Switches focus to the previous window.

       KeyWinMove="Alt+F7"
	   Starts movement of the active window.

       KeyWinSize="Alt+F8"
	   Starts resizing of the active window.

       KeyWinMinimize="Alt+F9"
	   Iconifies the active	window.

       KeyWinMaximize="Alt+F10"
	   Maximizes the active	window with borders.

       KeyWinMaximizeVert="Alt+Shift+F10"
	   Maximizes the active	window vertically.

       KeyWinMaximizeHoriz="undefined"
	   Maximizes the active	window horizontally.

       KeyWinFullscreen="Alt+F11"
	   Maximizes the active	window without borders.

       KeyWinRollup="Alt+F12"
	   Rolls up the	active window.

       KeyWinHide="Alt+Shift+F12"
	   Hides the active window.

       KeyWinMenu="Alt+space"
	   Posts the window menu.

       KeyWinArrangeNW="Ctrl+Alt+KP_7"
	   Moves the active window to the top left corner of the screen.

       KeyWinArrangeN="Ctrl+Alt+KP_8"
	   Moves the active window to the top middle of	the screen.

       KeyWinArrangeNE="Ctrl+Alt+KP_9"
	   Moves the active window to the top right of the screen.

       KeyWinArrangeE="Ctrl+Alt+KP_6"
	   Moves the active window to the middle right of the screen.

       KeyWinArrangeSE="Ctrl+Alt+KP_3"
	   Moves the active window to the bottom right of the screen.

       KeyWinArrangeS="Ctrl+Alt+KP_2"
	   Moves the active window to the bottom middle	of the screen.

       KeyWinArrangeSW="Ctrl+Alt+KP_1"
	   Moves the active window to the bottom left of the screen.

       KeyWinArrangeW="Ctrl+Alt+KP_4"
	   Moves the active window to the middle left of the screen.

       KeyWinArrangeC="Ctrl+Alt+KP_5"
	   Moves the active window to the center of the	screen.

       KeyWinTileLeft=""
	   Let the active window occupy	the left half of the screen.

       KeyWinTileRight=""
	   Let the active window occupy	the right half of the screen.

       KeyWinTileTop=""
	   Let the active window occupy	the top	half of	the screen.

       KeyWinTileBottom=""
	   Let the active window occupy	the bottom half	of the screen.

       KeyWinTileTopLeft=""
	   Let the active window occupy	the top	left quarter of	the screen.

       KeyWinTileTopRight=""
	   Let the active window occupy	the top	right quarter of the screen.

       KeyWinTileBottomLeft=""
	   Let the active window occupy	the bottom left	quarter	of the screen.

       KeyWinTileBottomRight=""
	   Let the active window  occupy  the  bottom  right  quarter  of  the
	   screen.

       KeyWinTileCenter=""
	   Let the active window occupy	the center quarter of the screen.

       KeyWinSmartPlace="Ctrl+Alt+Shift+KP_5"
	   Smart place the active window.

       KeySysWinMenu="Shift+Esc"
	   Posts the system window menu.

       KeySysWinNext="Alt+Esc"
	   Give	focus to the next window and raise it.

       KeySysWinPrev="Alt+Shift+Esc"
	   Give	focus to the previous window and raise it.

       KeySysDialog="Ctrl+Alt+Del"
	   Opens the IceWM system dialog in the	center of the screen.

       KeySysMenu="Ctrl+Esc"
	   Activates the IceWM root menu in the	lower left corner.

       KeySysWindowList="Alt+Ctrl+Esc"
	   Opens the IceWM system window list in the center of the screen.

       KeySysAddressBar="Alt+Ctrl+space"
	   Opens the address bar in the	task bar where a command can be	typed.

       KeySysWorkspacePrev="Alt+Ctrl+Left"
	   Goes	one workspace to the left.

       KeySysWorkspaceNext="Alt+Ctrl+Right"
	   Goes	one workspace to the right.

       KeySysWorkspaceLast="Alt+Ctrl+Down"
	   Goes	to the previous	workspace.

       KeySysWorkspacePrevTakeWin="Alt+Ctrl+Shift+Left"
	   Takes the active window one workspace to the	left.

       KeySysWorkspaceNextTakeWin="Alt+Ctrl+Shift+Right"
	   Takes the active window one workspace to the	right.

       KeySysWorkspaceLastTakeWin="Alt+Ctrl+Shift+Down"
	   Takes the active window to the previous workspace.

       KeySysWorkspace1="Alt+Ctrl+1"
	   Goes	to workspace 1.

       KeySysWorkspace2="Alt+Ctrl+2"
	   Goes	to workspace 2.

       KeySysWorkspace3="Alt+Ctrl+3"
	   Goes	to workspace 3.

       KeySysWorkspace4="Alt+Ctrl+4"
	   Goes	to workspace 4.

       KeySysWorkspace5="Alt+Ctrl+5"
	   Goes	to workspace 5.

       KeySysWorkspace6="Alt+Ctrl+6"
	   Goes	to workspace 6.

       KeySysWorkspace7="Alt+Ctrl+7"
	   Goes	to workspace 7.

       KeySysWorkspace8="Alt+Ctrl+8"
	   Goes	to workspace 8.

       KeySysWorkspace9="Alt+Ctrl+9"
	   Goes	to workspace 9.

       KeySysWorkspace10="Alt+Ctrl+0"
	   Goes	to workspace 10.

       KeySysWorkspace11="Alt+Ctrl+minus"
	   Goes	to workspace 11.

       KeySysWorkspace12="Alt+Ctrl+equal"
	   Goes	to workspace 12.

       KeySysWorkspace1TakeWin="Alt+Ctrl+Shift+1"
	   Takes the active window to workspace	1.

       KeySysWorkspace2TakeWin="Alt+Ctrl+Shift+2"
	   Takes the active window to workspace	2.

       KeySysWorkspace3TakeWin="Alt+Ctrl+Shift+3"
	   Takes the active window to workspace	3.

       KeySysWorkspace4TakeWin="Alt+Ctrl+Shift+4"
	   Takes the active window to workspace	4.

       KeySysWorkspace5TakeWin="Alt+Ctrl+Shift+5"
	   Takes the active window to workspace	5.

       KeySysWorkspace6TakeWin="Alt+Ctrl+Shift+6"
	   Takes the active window to workspace	6.

       KeySysWorkspace7TakeWin="Alt+Ctrl+Shift+7"
	   Takes the active window to workspace	7.

       KeySysWorkspace8TakeWin="Alt+Ctrl+Shift+8"
	   Takes the active window to workspace	8.

       KeySysWorkspace9TakeWin="Alt+Ctrl+Shift+9"
	   Takes the active window to workspace	9.

       KeySysWorkspace10TakeWin="Alt+Ctrl+Shift+0"
	   Takes the active window to workspace	10.

       KeySysWorkspace11TakeWin="Alt+Ctrl+Shift+minus"
	   Takes the active window to workspace	11.

       KeySysWorkspace12TakeWin="Alt+Ctrl+Shift+equal"
	   Takes the active window to workspace	12.

       KeySysTileVertical="Alt+Shift+F2"
	   Tiles all windows from left to right	maximized vertically.

       KeySysTileHorizontal="Alt+Shift+F3"
	   Tiles all windows from top to bottom	maximized horizontally.

       KeySysCascade="Alt+Shift+F4"
	   Makes  a  horizontal	 cascade  of  all  windows which are maximized
	   vertically.

       KeySysArrange="Alt+Shift+F5"
	   Rearranges the windows.

       KeySysUndoArrange="Alt+Shift+F7"
	   Undoes arrangement.

       KeySysArrangeIcons="Alt+Shift+F8"
	   Rearranges icons.

       KeySysMinimizeAll="Alt+Shift+F9"
	   Minimizes all windows.

       KeySysHideAll="Alt+Shift+F11"
	   Hides all windows.

       KeySysShowDesktop="Alt+Ctrl+d"
	   Unmaps all windows to show the desktop.

       KeySysCollapseTaskBar="Alt+Ctrl+h"
	   Hides the task bar.

       KeyTaskBarSwitchNext="undefined"
	   Switches to the next	window in the task bar.

       KeyTaskBarSwitchPrev="undefined"
	   Switches to the previous window in the task bar.

       KeyTaskBarMoveNext="undefined"
	   Moves the task bar button of	the current window right.

       KeyTaskBarMovePrev="undefined"
	   Moves the task bar button of	the current window left.

       KeySysWinListMenu="undefined"
	   Shows the window list menu.

       KeySysKeyboardNext="undefined"
	   Switch to the next keyboard layout in the KeyboardLayouts list.

       KeySysSwitchNext="Alt+Tab"
	   Opens the "QuickSwitch" popup (see "INPUT FOCUS") and/or moves  the
	   selector in the "QuickSwitch" popup.

       KeySysSwitchLast="Alt+Shift+Tab"
	   Works like "KeySysSwitchNext" but moving in the opposite direction.

       KeySysSwitchClass="Alt+grave"
	   Is  like  "KeySysSwitchNext"	 but  only  for	 windows with the same
	   WM_CLASS property as	the currently focused window.

   MOUSE BINDINGS
       You can control windows by a modified mouse button press:

       MouseWinMove="Alt+Pointer_Button1"
	   Moves the window under the mouse over the screen.

       MouseWinSize="Alt+Pointer_Button3"
	   Resizes the window.	Keep the key and button	pressed.   To  enlarge
	   the	window	move the mouse button away from	the center.  To	shrink
	   it move towards the centre.

       MouseWinRaise="Ctrl+Alt+Pointer_Button1"
	   Raises the window under the mouse.

       MouseWinLower="Ctrl+Alt+Pointer_Button1"
	   Lowers  the	window	under  the  mouse.   If	 this  is   equal   to
	   "MouseWinRaise"  and	 the window can	be raised then "MouseWinRaise"
	   takes preference over "MouseWinLower".

       MouseWinTabbing="Shift+Pointer_Button2"
	   Mouse binding to create tabs.  Drag the title bar with this	button
	   over	 another  title	 bar.	When  they start to flash, release the
	   button to merge the frame tabs.

       The title frame of a window also	listens	 for  mouse  clicks.   A  left
       double-click  maximizes	the window ("TitleBarMaximizeButton=1").  When
       Shift is	also pressed it	only maximizes vertically.  Press Alt+Shift to
       maximize	horizontally.

       Middle double-clicking rolls up the window  ("TitleBarRollupButton=2").
       Also  press  Shift to maximize horizontally. If TitleBarRollupButton is
       either 4	or 5 then the scroll wheel controls rolling up or down.

       Press a mouse button on the title bar and drag it to move  the  window.
       To   drag   a   maximized   window,   keep   the	 Shift	key  down.   A
       "Alt+Pointer_Button1" click in the title	bar lowers the window.

       When the	mouse is on the	window frame then  a  left  click  raises  the
       window.	 Dragging  with	 the  left  button  down  resizes  the window.
       Clicking	the right button pops up the context menu.  Dragging with  the
       right button moves the window.

       Double-clicking	on  the	 frame	border (or corner) maximizes just that
       side of the window. Another double-click	restores  that	side.  Double-
       clicking	on the border can also undo a maximization in that dimension.

       Clicking	 on the	desktop	activates a menu.  The middle button shows the
       window list ("DesktopWinListButton=2").	The  right  button  shows  the
       root  menu  ("DesktopMenuButton=3").  If	 you press "Ctrl+Alt" then the
       mouse wheel will	focus all applications in turn.

   SIGNALS
       icewm supports the following signals:

       SIGHUP
	   icewm will restart itself. It is a way to reload the	configuration.

       SIGINT, SIGTERM
	   icewm will cease to manage application windows and terminate.

       SIGQUIT
	   icewm will initiate the logout  procedure.	If  a  "LogoutCommand"
	   preferences option was configured it	will be	executed.

       SIGUSR2
	   Toggle the logging of X11 events, if	"logevents" was	configured.

   ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
       ICEWM_PRIVCFG
	   The	directory  for	user  private  configuration files.  When this
	   environment variable	is not specified,  the	default	 directory  is
	   $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/icewm  when	 that  directory exists, otherwise the
	   default value is $HOME/.icewm.

       DISPLAY
	   The name of the X11 server.	See Xorg(1) or Xserver(1).  This value
	   can be overridden by	the --display option.

       MAILPATH, MAIL
	   Gives the location of your mailbox.	If the schema is  omitted  the
	   local "file"	schema is assumed.  This is used by the	mailbox	applet
	   in  the  task  bar  to  show	 the  status  of your mailbox.	If the
	   "MailBoxPath" option	in the preferences file	is set,	then that  one
	   takes precedence.

   FILES
   CONFIGURATION DIRECTORIES
       icewm  looks  for  configuration	files in the following directories, in
       the given order,	until it finds one:

       $ICEWM_PRIVCFG/
	   Contains  user-specific  configurations.   When  ICEWM_PRIVCFG   is
	   specified,	  this	   directory	 takes	   precedence	  over
	   $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/icewm and $HOME/.icewm.

       $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/icewm/
	   Contains user-specific configurations.  When	this directory	exists
	   it take precedence over $HOME/.icewm.

       $HOME/.icewm/
	   Contains  user-specific  configurations.   This  is	the historical
	   default directory.

       /usr/local/etc/icewm/
	   Contains system-wide	customized defaults.  Please  note  that  your
	   local  installation	may  have  been	 configured to use a different
	   system location.  The output	of  "icewm  --directories"  will  show
	   this	location.

       /usr/local/share/icewm/
	   Default local installation settings.

   CONFIGURATION FILES
       env icewm-session(1)  loads  additional	environment variables from the
	   file	env.  Each line	is  subjected  to  POSIX  shell	 expansion  by
	   wordexp(3).	 Comment  lines	 starting  by  a  hash-sign  ("#") are
	   ignored.  icewm-session(1) will  load  those	 expanded  lines  that
	   contain  a  name, followed by an equals sign, followed by the value
	   (which may be empty).

	   See icewm-env(5).

       focus_mode
	   Defines the initial value for "FocusMode".  Its  default  value  is
	   "FocusMode=1"  (Click-to-focus).  This can be changed via the menu.
	   icewm will save the Focus menu choice in this file.

	   See icewm-focus_mode(5).

       keys
	   Global keybindings to launch	applications, which need not be	window
	   manager related.  Each non-empty line starts	with the  word	"key".
	   After  one  or  more	 spaces	 follows a double-quoted string	of the
	   bound X11 key combination like "Alt+Ctrl+Shift+X".  Then  after  at
	   least  one space follows a shell command-line that will be executed
	   by icewm whenever this key combination is  pressed.	 For  example,
	   the	 following   line   creates  a	hotkey	to  reload  the	 icewm
	   configuration:

	    key	"Ctrl+Shift+r"	    icesh restart

	   See icewm-keys(5).

       menu
	   A menu of applications; usually  customized	by  the	 user.	 icewm
	   provides  the icewm-menu-fdo(1) program to generate a default menu.
	   Similar   programs	are   xdg_menu(1),   mmaker(1)	  (MenuMaker),
	   xde-menu(1),	xdgmenumaker(1).

	   See icewm-menu(5).

       preferences
	   Contains  general  settings	like paths, colors and fonts, but also
	   options to control the icewm	focus behaviour	and the	 applets  that
	   are started in the task bar.	 The icewm installation	will provide a
	   default  preferences	 file,	which  can be copied to	the icewm user
	   configuration directory and modified.

	   See icewm-preferences(5).

       prefoverride
	   Settings which override the settings	from a	theme.	 Some  of  the
	   icewm  configuration	options	from the preferences file that control
	   the look-and-feel may be overridden by  the	theme,	if  the	 theme
	   designer thinks this	is desirable.  However,	this prefoverride file
	   will	 again	override  this	for  a	few  specific  options of your
	   choosing.  It is safe to leave this file empty initially.

	   See icewm-prefoverride(5).

       programs
	   An automatically generated menu of  applications.   This  could  be
	   used	 by  wmconfig(1), menu or similar programs to give easy	access
	   to all the desktop applications that	are installed on the system.

	   See icewm-programs(5).

       theme
	   This	file contains the name of the default theme.  On startup icewm
	   reads this file to obtain the theme name, unless icewm was  started
	   with	 the  --theme  option.	Whenever a different theme is selected
	   from	the icewm Menu then the	theme file  is	overwritten  with  the
	   name	 of  the selected theme.  This theme file contains the keyword
	   "Theme", followed by	an equals sign,	followed  by  a	 double-quoted
	   string  with	 the  theme  name.   The theme name is the name	of the
	   theme directory, followed by	a slash, followed by the  theme	 file.
	   Usually  the	theme file is just default.theme, but a	theme may have
	   alternatives.  Alternatives are small tweaks	of a theme.  These are
	   specified in	their own .theme file, which  replaces	default.theme.
	   If  no theme	file exists then icewm will use	the default setting of
	   "Theme="default/default.theme"".

	   See icewm-theme(5).

       toolbar
	   Contains names of quick to launch applications with icons  for  the
	   task	 bar.  Each non-empty non-comment line starts with the keyword
	   prog.  After	one or more spaces follows a name, which is  displayed
	   in  a  tool	tip  whenever the mouse	cursor hovers over the toolbar
	   icon.  This name may	be a double quoted string.  Then  follows  the
	   bare	name of	the icon to use	without	extensions.  This icon will be
	   shown  in  the toolbar.  The	last component is a shell command-line
	   that	will be	executed whenever the user presses  the	 icon  in  the
	   toolbar.   For example, the following line in toolbar will create a
	   button with tool tip	"Mozilla Firefox" with the firefox  icon  that
	   launches firefox(1) when clicked:

	    prog  "Mozilla Firefox"  firefox  /usr/bin/firefox --private-window

	   See icewm-toolbar(5).

       winoptions
	   Contains  settings  to control window appearance and	behaviour that
	   are specific	to applications	or groups  of  applications.   Options
	   can	control	 the  border,  whether it appears on the task bar, the
	   window list,	the system tray	and the	workspaces.  Also  its	layer,
	   geometry, whether it	can be moved, resized and closed.

	   See icewm-winoptions(5).

       startup
	   Contains  commands  to  be  executed	 on icewm startup.  This is an
	   executable script with commands to tweak X11	 settings  and	launch
	   some	applications that need to be active whenever icewm is started.
	   It is run by	icewm-session(1) when icewm starts.

	   See icewm-startup(5).

       shutdown
	   Contains  commands  to  be  executed	on icewm shutdown.  This is an
	   executable script with commands to be executed in the last stage of
	   icewm termination.  Typically they may undo some of the effects  of
	   the	startup	 script.   It  is  run	by icewm-session(1) when icewm
	   terminates.

	   See icewm-shutdown(5).

   CONFIGURATION SUBDIRECTORIES
       cursors
	   May contain cursor icons in the XPM image  format.  These  overrule
	   cursors  provided  by  a  theme.  There  are	 3  direction cursors:
	   left.xpm,  right.xpm,  move.xpm,  8	resize	 cursors:   sizeR.xpm,
	   sizeTR.xpm,	  sizeT.xpm,	sizeTL.xpm,   sizeL.xpm,   sizeBL.xpm,
	   sizeB.xpm,  sizeBR.xpm,  and	  4   scroll   cursors:	  scrollL.xpm,
	   scrollR.xpm,	 scrollU.xpm,  and  scrollD.xpm.   By  default	an XPM
	   header defines four dimensions: width, height,  colors  and	chars-
	   per-pixel.  For  cursors this must be extended to six. The last two
	   are the x-hotspot and the y-hotspot.	These define  which  point  in
	   the XPM image is the	sensitive point	for the	mouse pointer.

       icons
	   Contains  icons for applications and	keyboard layouts. These	can be
	   in XPM, PNG or SVG format.  The filename of an application icon may
	   follow a specific naming pattern, like app_32x32.xpm.   They	 start
	   with	 a  base  name,	 which	usually	 is  just a single word.  Then
	   follows an underscore, followed by  a  size	specification,	as  in
	   "SIZExSIZE".	  This	is  followed  by a dot and the file extension,
	   where the extension denotes the icon	image  format.	 Common	 sizes
	   are	16,  32	 and  48.   This  depends on the respective "IconSize"
	   preferences options.

       ledclock
	   Pictures of digits for the LED clock	 which	is  displayed  in  the
	   bottom-right	 corner	 of  the task bar.  These can be seen when the
	   "TaskBarShowClock" and "TaskBarClockLeds" options are both  set  to
	   1.

       mailbox
	   Icons  that	are  used  to  display different states	of the mailbox
	   applet in the task bar.  There are five states and each has its own
	   icon:   mail.xpm,	newmail.xpm,	unreadmail.xpm,	   nomail.xpm,
	   errmail.xpm.

       sounds
	   Audio  files	 that  are played by icesound(1) on GUI	events.	 These
	   are:	  startup.wav,	 shutdown.wav,	 restart.wav,	launchApp.wav,
	   workspaceChange.wav,	       windowOpen.wav,	      windowClose.wav,
	   dialogOpen.wav, dialogClose.wav, windowMax.wav,  windowRestore.wav,
	   windowMin.wav,  windowHide.wav,  windowRollup.wav, windowMoved.wav,
	   windowSized.wav, windowLower.wav.

       taskbar
	   Pictures to customize the look of the  task	bar.   These  include:
	   taskbarbg.xpm,	 taskbuttonactive.xpm,	     taskbuttonbg.xpm,
	   taskbuttonminimized.xpm,			     toolbuttonbg.xpm,
	   workspacebuttonactive.xpm, workspacebuttonbg.xpm.

       themes
	   A  directory	to store themes.  Each theme is	stored in its own sub-
	   directory in	the themes directory. A	 theme	contains  at  least  a
	   default.theme  file,	 and  optionally  theme	alternatives which are
	   additional files that have a	.theme file name  extension  and  that
	   contain tweaks of the default.theme file.  How to create a theme is
	   explained in	the IceWM Theme	Creation Howto.

       workspace
	   If  "PagerShowPreview"  is disabled,	icewm looks in the "workspace"
	   directory for images	to draw	 on  a	workspace  button.  The	 image
	   filename should have	the name of the	workspace. The image extension
	   is optional.

   OPACITY
       IceWM  supports	window	opacity	and transparency in connection with an
       external	compositor like	compton(1) or picom(1).	 If  a	client	window
       sets  the  "_NET_WM_WINDOW_OPACITY"  property on	its window, then icewm
       will copy this to the outer frame window,  where	 the  compositor  will
       read it and adjust the opacity accordingly.

       The  opacity can	also be	set in the icewm-winoptions(5) file.  icesh(1)
       can control the opacity level of	running	applications.

       The _NET_WM_WINDOW_TYPE properties that icewm sets on its  windows  are
       DIALOG,	NOTIFICATION,  POPUP_MENU  and	TOOLTIP.  The output of	"icesh
       windows"	shows their WM_CLASS values. These can be helpful to configure
       compton.

   EXAMPLES
       Examples	of the above configuration files can be	found in  the  default
       installation  path  or  in the system-wide defaults.  See the output of
       "icewm --directories" for their locations.

   CONFORMING TO
       ICCCM 2.0: partial.  NetWM/EWMH:	extensive.  See	the file COMPLIANCE in
       the distribution	for full details.

   SEE ALSO
       icehelp(1), icesh(1), icesound(1),  icewm-env(5),  icewm-focus_mode(5),
       icewm-keys(5),  icewm-menu(5), icewm-menu-fdo(1), icewm-menu-xrandr(1),
       icewm-preferences(5),	 icewm-prefoverride(5),	    icewm-programs(5),
       icewm-session(1),	icewm-set-gnomewm(1),	    icewm-shutdown(5),
       icewm-startup(5),	   icewm-theme(5),	     icewm-toolbar(5),
       icewm-winoptions(5),  icewmbg(1),  icewmhint(1),	setxkbmap(1), Xorg(1),
       Xserver(1), xinit(1), xprop(1), xwininfo(1), wmctrl(1).

   BUGS
       Please report bugs at <https://github.com/bbidulock/icewm/issues>.

   AUTHOR
       Brian Bidulock <mailto:bidulock@openss7.org>.

       See --copying for full copyright	notice and copying permissions.

   LICENSE
       IceWM is	licensed under the GNU Library General	Public	License.   See
       the  COPYING  file  in  the  distribution  or use the --copying flag to
       display copying permissions.

icewm 3.7.3			  2025-03-30			      ICEWM(1)

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