The Qwt library contains GUI Components and utility classes which
are primarily useful for programs with a technical background.
Beside a 2D plot widget it provides scales, sliders, dials, compasses,
thermometers, wheels and knobs to control or display values, arrays,
or ranges of type double.
This port installs Qt Designer plugin for Qwt library version 6.
cwm is a window manager for X11 initially inspired by evilwm. cwm has several
novel features, including the ability to search for windows. it features a
very simple and attractive aesthetic.
This port is based on OpenBSD's continued work on cwm, as development on the
project seems to have halted.
lwm is a window manager for X that tries to keep out of your
face. There are no icons, no button bars, no icon docks, no root
menus, no nothing...
It's a tiny (less than 30k shared binary) and fast window manager.
Marco (mate-window-manager) is a low-frills Window Manager, and
is the default Window Manager of the MATE desktop. It provides
most of the features expected of a Window Manager, but leaves
everything it can up to other components of the MATE environment.
Metacity is a low-frills Window Manager, and is the default
Window Manager of the GNOME 2 desktop. It provides most of
the features expected of a Window Manager, but leaves everything
it can up to other components of the GNOME environment.
JWM is a window manager for the X11 Window System. JWM is written in C
and uses only Xlib at a minimum, though additional libraries are
supported for extended functionality and features. JWM supports MWM and
Extended Window Manager Hints (EWMH).
sWM was written for small computer system with very little amount of
memory and small screen sizes. It was written to speed up working with
laptops or even PDA's. You need a minimum of about 12k of diskspace
(minimal mode). It uses even less memory than a rxvt.
With AllTray you can dock any application with no native tray icon (like
Evolution, Thunderbird, terminals) into the system tray. A high-light feature
is that a click on the "close" button will minimize back to system tray. It
works well with GNOME, KDE, XFCE 4*, Fluxbox* and WindowMaker*.
Guake is a dropdown terminal made for the GNOME desktop environment,
but you can run it with TWM too ;-), if you install ports/x11/trayer
or a similar program.
Its style of window is based on fps games, and one of its purposes
is to be easy to reach.
Brightside is a tool to add reactivity to the corners and edges of your GNOME
desktop.
Brightside provides edge flipping to allow you to switch to the adjacent
workspace simply by pressing your mouse against the edge of the screen.
Brightside also allows you to assign configurable actions to occur while you
rest the mouse in a corner of the screen.
-- Brightside Homepage