Issue #6 highlighted a workflow that I don't personally use, but I am
sure is common among other Windows users, which is to use the Close
button to minimize an application to the tray.
Since this is largely a configurable option in those applications
(Discord etc.), I have implemented a command for the user to identify
those applications themselves when configuring the window manager,
instead of adding them to the previous Vec of known multi-window
applications that need to be identified by default.
Close/minimize to tray applications can be identified either by their
class or their executable name.
I figure it is pretty important to know the rules defined on the window
manager instance, so I have exposed these on a new window_manager::State
struct which is now what get returns from the 'komorebic.exe state'
command.
resolve#6
Adds two new commands that enable the manual reloading of an AHK config
file in the default location and the watching and automatic reloading of
an AHK config file in the default location.
When AutoHotKey is detected, and %USERPROFILE%\komorebi.ahk exists,
komorebi.exe will now try to run the ahk script after starting the
command listener.
For this to work smoothly, it is important to set the #SingleInstance
directive to Force in komorebi.ahk, which will ensure that duplicates of
the script are not run, and a new version of the script is loaded
without displaying a GUI confirmation prompt.
resolve#3
The last remaining feature to bring komorebi to feature parity with
yatta. Implementing this in komorebi was a lot harder because I had to
make sure that resizing worked even when the layout is flipped (in any
one of the three possible ways).
In yatta, resize dimension information was stored on the window. In
komorebi, I initially tried storing this information on the Container
itself, but eventually decided to store it for all Containers in the
Workspace.
There is some additional work required to ensure that this Vec is kept
up to date whenever containers are added or destroyed, but it all seems
to be working fairly well.
I got rid of the iterative fibonacci code that I adapted from leftwm and
went back and reworked the recursive code that I was using in yatta
(originally from umberwm I think) to integrate layout flipping. At least
for me, it is much easier to reason about.