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-rw-r--r--CONFIG32
1 files changed, 13 insertions, 19 deletions
diff --git a/CONFIG b/CONFIG
index 3bf63db..e7c5f41 100644
--- a/CONFIG
+++ b/CONFIG
@@ -4,18 +4,18 @@ xmonad is configured by creating and editing the Haskell file:
~/.xmonad/xmonad.hs
-xmonad then uses default settings from this file as arguments to the
-window manager.
+xmonad then uses settings from this file as arguments to the window manager,
+on startup.
== A simple example ==
-Here is a basic example, which takes defaults from xmonad, and overrides
+Here is a basic example, which takes defaults from xmonad, and overrides
the border width, default terminal, and some colours:
--
-- An example, simple ~/.xmonad/xmonad.hs file.
-- It overrides a few basic settings, reusing all the other defaults,
- --
+ --
import XMonad
@@ -25,23 +25,14 @@ the border width, default terminal, and some colours:
, normalBorderColor = "#cccccc"
, focusedBorderColor = "#cd8b00" }
-This will run 'xmonad', the window manager, with your settings passed as
-arguments.
-
-Overriding default settings like this (using "record update syntax"),
-will yield the shortest config file, as you only have to describe values
-that differ from the defaults.
-
-An alternative is to inline the entire default config file from xmonad,
-and edit values you wish to change. This is requires more work, but some
-users may find this easier. You can find the defaults in the file:
+You can find the defaults in the file:
XMonad/Config.hs
== Checking your xmonad.hs is correct ==
Place this text in ~/.xmonad/xmonad.hs, and then check that it is
-syntactically and type correct, by loading it in the Haskell
+syntactically and type correct by loading it in the Haskell
interpreter:
$ ghci ~/.xmonad/xmonad.hs
@@ -56,10 +47,13 @@ Ok, looks good.
== Loading your configuration ==
-To have xmonad start using your settings, try mod-q. xmonad will attempt
-to compile this file, and run it. If it is unable to, the defaults are
-used. This requires GHC and xmonad are in your $PATH settings. If
-GHC isn't in your path, you can still compile the xmonad.hs file yourself:
+To have xmonad start using your settings, type 'mod-q'. xmonad will
+then load this new file, and run it. If it is unable to, the defaults
+are used.
+
+To load succesfully, both 'xmonad' and 'ghc' must be in your $PATH
+environment variable. If GHC isn't in your path, for some reason, you
+can compile the xmonad.hs file yourself:
$ cd ~/.xmonad
$ ghc --make xmonad.hs