Rezlooks is a GTK+2 theme engine based on the Cairo-enabled CVS Clearlooks
engine code.
PyGUI is a GUI API that is designed specifically for Python, taking
advantage of Python's unique language features and working smoothly
with Python's data types.
Skin Look And Feel allows Java developers to write skinnable application
using the Swing toolkit. Skin Look And Feel is able to load themepacks (a
bundle of GTK - The Gimp Toolkit - and KDE - The K Desktop Environment - skins)
to enhance your application GUI controls such as Buttons, Checks, Radios,
Scrollbars, Progress Bar, Lists, Tables, Internal Frames, Colors, Background
Textures, Regular Windows.
This Tcl/Tk extension offers raw access to the X Shaped Window
Extension.
tkdnd is an extension that adds native drag & drop capabilities to the
tk toolkit. It can be used with any tk version equal or greater to 8.4
and currently only the UNIX (X-Windows) and Microsoft Windows operating
systems are supported. Under Unix the drag & drop protocol in use is the
XDND protocol version 4 (also used by the QT toolkit, KDE & GNOME
Desktops).
Amiga and Workbench are registered trademarks of Amiga Technologies GMBH.
This is a port of amiwm, a window manager to make your desktop look like an
Amiga(TM).
The Enlightenment DR16 Window Manager is a robust, flexible, highly
configurable, graphically rich yet unobtrusive desktop environment
for the X11 windowing system.
Jewel is a window manager based upon aewm++. It is meant as a
platform for more vigorous addition of new features.
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.
w9wm is a quick & dirty hack based on 9wm, the wonderful "template"
window manager made by David Hogan.
9wm is really nice for all day use (I mean, a large Emacs window
covering the whole screen and a terminal to use Lynx and browse the
web ;-)) provided that you do not have a large number of windows on
your screen. But in some occasions it is not the case (ie. you have
to telnet to 4-5 remote machines), which is painful with 9wm.
This need for virtual screens motivated this about 50 lines hack.
w9wm brings support for virtual screens (provided you use the second
button, aka middle button to select one virtual screen) as well as for
key bindings (to switch from one window to another).