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I have a load of virtual desktops running and I usually have one full screen application per desktop (so sort of like the Ratpoison WM but with an option to use it in other ways when needed). I want new windows to automatically be put in certain desktop numbers when they start up. What's the easiest way to do this?

Thomas Parslow
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4 Answers4

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If you're using Compiz, install compizconfig-settings-manager, activate the "Place Windows" plugin, and in the "Fixed Window Placement" tab, you can adjust which windows should default to which viewport.

mgunes
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  • +1 for `fixed window placement`. Easiest solution for any compiz user. This tab is found in the configuration for the `Place Windows` plugin under the `Window management` category. Of course, `Place Windows` needs to be enabled for this to work. – koushik Oct 12 '10 at 15:10
  • I'm confused about `viewports` and `workspaces` -- What I see in the `fixed window placement` tab is X/Y viewport coordinates that don't seem to correlate to my four workspaces. – Amanda May 20 '11 at 13:26
  • I don't see a `Fixed Window Placement` tab... – RobinJ Dec 03 '11 at 18:02
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You might want to take a look at the Devil's Pie tool; it is available in Ubuntu as package devilspie (apt-get install devilspie).

This article and this other one explain some of its prominent features, and provides some example code, including how to move a window to a certain workspace and maximize it.

Riccardo Murri
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0

I, too have a lot of virtual desktops and a workflow that has me opening windows on different workspaces, but I've adopted an 'open and slide' approach with compiz.. right after opening an application, I use a customized shortcut to slide the new window to the appropriate workspace, then slide back to the previous workspace with another shortcut.

In my case, this is something like shift-ctrl-left arrow then ctrl-alt-right arrow.. very, very quick and I have full control over where they go every time instead of being locked-in to one configuration.

tamale
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-1

If your requirement can make use of scripts, then it might be worth investigating wmctrl eg wmctrl -s 0 would switch to desktop 0.

outofstep
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