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NAME

       XSetWMProperties, XmbSetWMProperties, Xutf8SetWMProperties - set standard window properties

SYNTAX


       void  XSetWMProperties(Display  *display, Window w, XTextProperty *window_name, XTextProperty *icon_name,
              char **argv, int argc, XSizeHints *normal_hints, XWMHints *wm_hints, XClassHint *class_hints);

       void XmbSetWMProperties(Display *display, Window w, char *window_name, char *icon_name, char *argv[], int
              argc, XSizeHints *normal_hints, XWMHints *wm_hints, XClassHint *class_hints);

       void Xutf8SetWMProperties(Display *display, Window w, char *window_name, char *icon_name,  char  *argv[],
              int argc, XSizeHints *normal_hints, XWMHints *wm_hints, XClassHint *class_hints);

ARGUMENTS

       argc      Specifies the number of arguments.

       argv      Specifies the application's argument list.

       class_hints
                 Specifies the XClassHint structure to be used.

       display   Specifies the connection to the X server.

       icon_name Specifies the icon name, which should be a null-terminated string.

       normal_hints
                 Specifies the size hints for the window in its normal state.

       w         Specifies the window.

       window_name
                 Specifies the window name, which should be a null-terminated string.

       wm_hints  Specifies the XWMHints structure to be used.

DESCRIPTION

       The  XSetWMProperties  convenience  function  provides  a  single programming interface for setting those
       essential window properties that are used for communicating with other clients (particularly  window  and
       session managers).

       If  the  window_name  argument  is  non-NULL,  XSetWMProperties calls XSetWMName, which in turn, sets the
       WM_NAME property (see section 14.1.4).  If the icon_name argument  is  non-NULL,  XSetWMProperties  calls
       XSetWMIconName,  which sets the WM_ICON_NAME property (see section 14.1.5).  If the argv argument is non-
       NULL, XSetWMProperties calls XSetCommand, which sets the WM_COMMAND property (see section 14.2.1).   Note
       that  an  argc of zero is allowed to indicate a zero-length command.  Note also that the hostname of this
       machine is stored using XSetWMClientMachine (see section 14.2.2).

       If the normal_hints argument is  non-NULL,  XSetWMProperties  calls  XSetWMNormalHints,  which  sets  the
       WM_NORMAL_HINTS  property  (see  section 14.1.7).  If the wm_hints argument is non-NULL, XSetWMProperties
       calls XSetWMHints, which sets the WM_HINTS property (see section 14.1.6).

       If the class_hints argument is non-NULL, XSetWMProperties calls XSetClassHint, which  sets  the  WM_CLASS
       property  (see  section  14.1.8).   If the res_name member in the XClassHint structure is set to the NULL
       pointer and the RESOURCE_NAME environment variable is set, then the value of the environment variable  is
       substituted  for res_name.  If the res_name member is NULL, the environment variable is not set, and argv
       and argv[0] are set, then the value of argv[0], stripped of any directory prefixes,  is  substituted  for
       res_name.

       The  XmbSetWMProperties  and  Xutf8SetWMProperties  convenience  functions  provide  a simple programming
       interface for setting those essential window properties  that  are  used  for  communicating  with  other
       clients (particularly window and session managers).

       If  the  window_name  argument  is non-NULL, they set the WM_NAME property.  If the icon_name argument is
       non-NULL, they set the  WM_ICON_NAME  property.   The  window_name  and  icon_name  arguments  are  null-
       terminated   strings,   for   XmbSetWMProperties   in   the   encoding   of   the   current  locale,  for
       Xutf8SetWMProperties in UTF-8 encoding.  If the arguments can be fully converted to the STRING  encoding,
       the properties are created with type ``STRING''; otherwise, the arguments are converted to Compound Text,
       and the properties are created with type ``COMPOUND_TEXT''.

       If   the   normal_hints   argument   is   non-NULL,   XmbSetWMProperties  and  Xutf8SetWMProperties  call
       XSetWMNormalHints, which sets the  WM_NORMAL_HINTS  property  (see  section  14.1.7).   If  the  wm_hints
       argument  is  non-NULL,  XmbSetWMProperties  and  Xutf8SetWMProperties  call  XSetWMHints, which sets the
       WM_HINTS property (see section 14.1.6).

       If the argv argument is non-NULL, XmbSetWMProperties and Xutf8SetWMProperties set the WM_COMMAND property
       from argv and argc.  An argc of zero indicates a zero-length command.

       The hostname of the machine is stored using XSetWMClientMachine (see section 14.2.2).

       If the class_hints argument is non-NULL, XmbSetWMProperties and  Xutf8SetWMProperties  set  the  WM_CLASS
       property.   If  the  res_name  member  in  the  XClassHint  structure  is set to the NULL pointer and the
       RESOURCE_NAME environment variable is set, the value of  the  environment  variable  is  substituted  for
       res_name.   If the res_name member is NULL, the environment variable is not set, and argv and argv[0] are
       set, then the value of argv[0], stripped of any directory prefixes, is substituted for res_name.

       It is assumed that the supplied class_hints.res_name and argv, the  RESOURCE_NAME  environment  variable,
       and  the  hostname of the machine are in the encoding of the current locale.  The corresponding WM_CLASS,
       WM_COMMAND, and WM_CLIENT_MACHINE properties are typed according to the local host locale announcer.   No
       encoding conversion is performed for these strings prior to storage in the properties.

       For   clients   that   need   to   process   the  property  text  in  a  locale,  XmbSetWMProperties  and
       Xutf8SetWMProperties set the WM_LOCALE_NAME property to be the name of the current locale.  The  name  is
       assumed  to  be  in  the  Host  Portable Character Encoding and is converted to STRING for storage in the
       property.

       XSetWMProperties, XmbSetWMProperties and Xutf8SetWMProperties can generate BadAlloc and BadWindow errors.

       The function Xutf8SetWMProperties is an extension introduced by The XFree86 Project, Inc. in their  4.0.2
       release. Its presence is indicated by the macro X_HAVE_UTF8_STRING.

PROPERTIES

       WM_CLASS  Set  by  application  programs to allow window and session managers to obtain the application's
                 resources from the resource database.

       WM_CLIENT_MACHINE
                 The string name of the machine on which the client application is running.

       WM_COMMAND
                 The command and arguments, null-separated, used to invoke the application.

       WM_HINTS  Additional hints set by the client for use by the window manager.  The C type of this  property
                 is XWMHints.

       WM_ICON_NAME
                 The name to be used in an icon.

       WM_NAME   The name of the application.

       WM_NORMAL_HINTS
                 Size hints for a window in its normal state.  The C type of this property is XSizeHints.

DIAGNOSTICS

       BadAlloc  The server failed to allocate the requested resource or server memory.

       BadWindow A value for a Window argument does not name a defined Window.

SEE ALSO

       XAllocClassHint(3),    XAllocIconSize(3),    XAllocSizeHints(3),   XAllocWMHints(3),   XParseGeometry(3),
       XSetCommand(3),       XSetTransientForHint(3),        XSetTextProperty(3),        XSetWMClientMachine(3),
       XSetWMColormapWindows(3),          XSetWMIconName(3),          XSetWMName(3),         XSetWMProtocols(3),
       XStringListToTextProperty(3), XTextListToTextProperty(3)
       Xlib - C Language X Interface

X Version 11                                      libX11 1.6.3                               XSetWMProperties(3)