I want my windows to be a specific size (not full screen) and to be in the middle of the screen by default. When I close the application and re-open it, it will be the dimensions I want it to be by default. Is there an easy way to do that? I'm using Ubuntu 11.10 and the Unity desktop enviroment.
4 Answers
I don't know if you can simply make all windows behave the same, but you can individually. We'll use Thunderbird as an example.
Make sure you have ccsm installed: Open a terminal (Press Control-Alt-T) and enter
sudo apt-get install compizconfig-settings-manager
Open ccsm. You'll be using the Place Windows and Windows Rules plugins in the Window Management section.
First, go into Place Windows, select the Fixed Window Placement tab and Select New.
Enter the program name (class=xxxx) and set the starting X and Y coordinates. The coordinates start from the top left corner of the screen. This tells the program where to open on the screen.
Next go to the Windows Rules plugin and select the Size Rules tab and new.
Enter the program name (class=xxxx) and set the X and Y size. This tells the program what size to open the program in pixels (pixels wide x pixels high).
Now, open the program you just did this for and it should open where and how big you want it to everytime.
Note that you will have to do this for every program you want to open in a specific place and a specific size. You can also use one without the other, for instance always having a program open in a specific place but not having it's size defined.
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That's a great documented answer @James! Do you know if i can set a shortcut, e.g. Super+I to set the current open window to an specific size? e.g. 1280x900 Jan 19, 2014 at 17:30
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4Never mind, i've just found:
wmctrl -r :ACTIVE: -e 0,-1,-1,1280,900
and added as a Custom Shortcut within Keyboard Shortcuts settings :) Jan 19, 2014 at 21:49 -
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2On Ubuntu 14.04 (maybe also in other versions) you have also to install package "compiz-plugins" in order to have the mentioned features.– StefanoDec 30, 2014 at 20:30
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2To found the class name of a specific window, you can open a terminal, execute
xprop
and click with mouse inside the window.– StefanoDec 30, 2014 at 20:34
Check out gdevilspie from the universe repository! You can use it to set a rule for your window by application name and use that rule to resize, unmaximize... really anything window-related.
Gdevilspie Step-By-Step:
- Click the Add button
- Type "Firefox" in the top-most textbox
- In the "Matching tab", check "Window name"
- In the box labeled "equal(s)" type: "Firefox"
- Under actions checkmark:
- Unminimize
- Geometry (set to the desired geometry - you can also use the command-line program xwininfo to get the width/height of a window when you have it resized to where you want it. The same goes for xposition and yposition)
- Click Save
- Click the Start button
- Click "Start devilspie daemon automatically at login" if you want the fix to be semi-permanent.
- Hang on to your hat!
Open
~/.config/compiz-1/compizconfig/config
under the [general]
section edit or add the size option:
[general]
profile =
integration = true
size = 1200, 800
Firefox not remembering the size and position on the screen. Solution work for me: Press Super key...open dash...click compiz ....click on unity plugin...experimental tab...automaximize value = 100. that worked for me.