I like the way Foxit Reader can change the color of both pdf text background and font; I have books in pdf format that I need to read on the laptop and I want to control the colors of text area. (I have other options to achieve the same purpose - more here) but I would prefer to use Foxit Reader instead of Adobe Reader (not supported anymore, albeit installable on my system) and Master PDF Editor (more of an editor than a reader).
Foxit Reader doesn't follow system theming on Linux for the moment, but that wouldn't be such a big problem for me if it had a full-screen option. But it lacks that too. There is no such option within the program and its window doesn't enter full-screen mode with F11 as other program's windows do.
I am especially interested in Xfwm4 in Xfce, but I would like to know if other window managers can force full-screen on an application that doesn't cover that aspect itself.
How come the window manager cannot force full-screen on any window? Can that limitation be overcome? Is there a difference between window managers when it comes to that?
wmctrl
bound to a shotcut key to maximize (not full screen) the window: Resizing windows to a particular width and height instantly I ran into some troubles withdevilspie
a few years ago when first learning Ubuntu butwmctrl
andxdotool
I've had great success with.If the application itself does not have "native" full screen state, the most you can do is maximize and undecorate