This manual page is for Mac OS X version 10.6.3

If you are running a different version of Mac OS X, view the documentation locally:

  • In Terminal, using the man(1) command

Reading manual pages

Manual pages are intended as a quick reference for people who already understand a technology.

  • For more information about the manual page format, see the manual page for manpages(5).

  • For more information about this technology, look for other documentation in the Apple Reference Library.

  • For general information about writing shell scripts, read Shell Scripting Primer.



XPROP(1)                                                                                            XPROP(1)



NAME
       xprop - property displayer for X

SYNOPSIS
       xprop [-help] [-grammar] [-id id] [-root] [-name name] [-frame] [-font font] [-display display] [-len
       n] [-notype] [-fs file] [-remove property-name] [-set property-name value]  [-spy]  [-f  atom  format
       [dformat]]* [format [dformat] atom]*

SUMMARY
       The xprop utility is for displaying window and font properties in an X server.  One window or font is
       selected using the command line arguments or possibly in the case of a window,  by  clicking  on  the
       desired window.  A list of properties is then given, possibly with formatting information.

OPTIONS
       -help   Print out a summary of command line options.


       -grammar
               Print out a detailed grammar for all command line options.


       -id id  This  argument  allows the user to select window id on the command line rather than using the
               pointer to select the target window.  This is very useful in debugging X  applications  where
               the target window is not mapped to the screen or where the use of the pointer might be impos-sible impossible
               sible or interfere with the application.


       -name name
               This argument allows the user to specify that the window named name is the target  window  on
               the command line rather than using the pointer to select the target window.


       -font font
               This  argument  allows  the  user  to specify that the properties of font font should be dis-played. displayed.
               played.


       -root   This argument specifies that X's root window is the target window.  This is useful in  situa-tions situations
               tions where the root window is completely obscured.


       -display display
               This argument allows you to specify the server to connect to; see X(7).


       -len n  Specifies that at most n bytes of any property should be read or displayed.


       -notype Specifies that the type of each property should not be displayed.


       -fs file
               Specifies that file file should be used as a source of more formats for properties.


       -frame  Specifies  that  when  selecting  a  window by hand (i.e. if none of -name, -root, or -id are
               given), look at the window manager frame (if any) instead of looking for the client window.


       -remove property-name
               Specifies the name of a property to be removed from the indicated window.


       -set property-name value
               Specifies the name of a property and a property value, to be set on the indicated window.


       -spy    Examine window properties forever, looking for property change events.


       -f name format [dformat]
               Specifies that the format for name should be format and that the dformat for name  should  be
               dformat.  If dformat is missing, " = $0+\n" is assumed.

DESCRIPTION
       For  each of these properties, its value on the selected window or font is printed using the supplied
       formatting information if any.  If no formatting information is supplied, internal defaults are used.
       If  a  property  is not defined on the selected window or font, "not defined" is printed as the value
       for that property.  If no property list is given, all the properties possessed by the selected window
       or font are printed.

       A  window  may be selected in one of four ways.  First, if the desired window is the root window, the
       -root argument may be used.  If the desired window is not the root window, it may be selected in  two
       ways  on the command line, either by id number such as might be obtained from xwininfo, or by name if
       the window possesses a name.  The -id argument selects a window by id number in either decimal or hex
       (must start with 0x) while the -name argument selects a window by name.

       The  last  way  to  select a window does not involve the command line at all.  If none of -font, -id,
       -name, and -root are specified, a crosshairs cursor is displayed and the user is  allowed  to  choose
       any visible window by pressing any pointer button in the desired window.  If it is desired to display
       properties of a font as opposed to a window, the -font argument must be used.

       Other than the above four arguments and the -help argument for obtaining help, and the -grammar argu-ment argument
       ment for listing the full grammar for the command line, all the other command line arguments are used
       in specifying both the format of the properties to be displayed and how to display them.  The -len  n
       argument  specifies  that  at most n bytes of any given property will be read and displayed.  This is
       useful for example when displaying the cut buffer on the root window which could run to several pages
       if displayed in full.

       Normally each property name is displayed by printing first the property name then its type (if it has
       one) in parentheses followed by its value.  The -notype argument specifies that property types should
       not  be displayed.  The -fs argument is used to specify a file containing a list of formats for prop-erties properties
       erties while the -f argument is used to specify the format for one property.

       The formatting information for a property actually consists of two parts, a  format  and  a  dformat.
       The  format  specifies the actual formatting of the property (i.e., is it made up of words, bytes, or
       longs?, etc.) while the dformat specifies how the property should be displayed.

       The following paragraphs describe how to construct formats  and  dformats.   However,  for  the  vast
       majority of users and uses, this should not be necessary as the built in defaults contain the formats
       and dformats necessary to display all the standard properties.  It should only be necessary to  spec-ify specify
       ify formats and dformats if a new property is being dealt with or the user dislikes the standard dis-play display
       play format.  New users especially are encouraged to skip this part.

       A format consists of one of 0, 8, 16, or 32 followed by a sequence of one or more format  characters.
       The  0,  8, 16, or 32 specifies how many bits per field there are in the property.  Zero is a special
       case meaning use the field size information associated with  the  property  itself.   (This  is  only
       needed  for  special cases like type INTEGER which is actually three different types depending on the
       size of the fields of the property.)

       A value of 8 means that the property is a sequence of bytes while a value of 16 would mean  that  the
       property is a sequence of words.  The difference between these two lies in the fact that the sequence
       of words will be byte swapped while the sequence of bytes will not be when read by a machine  of  the
       opposite  byte  order of the machine that originally wrote the property.  For more information on how
       properties are formatted and stored, consult the Xlib manual.

       Once the size of the fields has been specified, it is necessary to specify the  type  of  each  field
       (i.e.,  is  it  an integer, a string, an atom, or what?)  This is done using one format character per
       field.  If there are more fields in the property than format characters supplied, the last  character
       will  be  repeated  as many times as necessary for the extra fields.  The format characters and their
       meaning are as follows:

       a      The field holds an atom number.  A field of this type should be of size 32.

       b      The field is an boolean.  A 0 means false while anything else means true.

       c      The field is an unsigned number, a cardinal.

       i      The field is a signed integer.

       m      The field is a set of bit flags, 1 meaning on.

       s      This field and the next ones until either a 0 or the end of the property represent a  sequence
              of  bytes.  This format character is only usable with a field size of 8 and is most often used
              to represent a string.

       t      This field and the next ones until either a 0 or the end of the property represent an interna-tionalized internationalized
              tionalized  text  string.  This  format  character  is only usable with a field size of 8. The
              string is assumed to be in an ICCCM compliant encoding and is converted to the current  locale
              encoding before being output.

       x      The  field  is a hex number (like 'c' but displayed in hex - most useful for displaying window
              ids and the like)

       An example format is 32ica which is the format for a property of three fields of 32  bits  each,  the
       first holding a signed integer, the second an unsigned integer, and the third an atom.

       The  format  of a dformat unlike that of a format is not so rigid.  The only limitations on a dformat
       is that one may not start with a letter or a dash.  This is so that it can be  distinguished  from  a
       property  name  or an argument.  A dformat is a text string containing special characters instructing
       that various fields be printed at various points in a manner similar to the formatting string used by
       printf.  For example, the dformat " is ( $0, $1 \)\n" would render the POINT 3, -4 which has a format
       of 32ii as " is ( 3, -4 )\n".

       Any character other than a $, ?, \, or a ( in a dformat prints as itself.  To print out one of $,  ?,
       \,  or  (  precede  it  by  a  \.   For example, to print out a $, use \$.  Several special backslash
       sequences are provided as shortcuts.  \n will cause a newline to be displayed while \t will  cause  a
       tab to be displayed.  \o where o is an octal number will display character number o.

       A  $ followed by a number n causes field number n to be displayed.  The format of the displayed field
       depends on the formatting character used to describe it in the corresponding format.  I.e., if a car-dinal cardinal
       dinal  is described by 'c' it will print in decimal while if it is described by a 'x' it is displayed
       in hex.

       If the field is not present in the property (this is  possible  with  some  properties),  <field  not
       available>  is displayed instead.  $n+ will display field number n then a comma then field number n+1
       then another comma then ... until the last field defined.  If field n is not defined, nothing is dis-played. displayed.
       played.  This is useful for a property that is a list of values.

       A  ? is used to start a conditional expression, a kind of if-then statement.  ?exp(text) will display
       text if and only if exp evaluates to non-zero.  This is useful for  two  things.   First,  it  allows
       fields  to  be displayed if and only if a flag is set.  And second, it allows a value such as a state
       number to be displayed as a name rather than as just a number.  The syntax of exp is as follows:

       exp    ::= term | term=exp | !exp

       term   ::= n | $n | mn

       The ! operator is a logical ``not'', changing 0 to 1 and any non-zero value to 0.  = is  an  equality
       operator.  Note that internally all expressions are evaluated as 32 bit numbers so -1 is not equal to
       65535.  = returns 1 if the two values are equal and 0 if not.  n  represents  the  constant  value  n
       while  $n represents the value of field number n.  mn is 1 if flag number n in the first field having
       format character 'm' in the corresponding format is 1, 0 otherwise.

       Examples: ?m3(count: $3\n) displays field 3 with a label of count if and only if flag number 3 (count
       starts at 0!) is on.  ?$2=0(True)?!$2=0(False) displays the inverted value of field 2 as a boolean.

       In  order  to  display  a  property,  xprop needs both a format and a dformat.  Before xprop uses its
       default values of a format of 32x and a dformat of " = { $0+ }\n", it searches several places  in  an
       attempt  to  find more specific formats.  First, a search is made using the name of the property.  If
       this fails, a search is made using the type of the property.  This allows type STRING to  be  defined
       with  one set of formats while allowing property WM_NAME which is of type STRING to be defined with a
       different format.  In this way, the display formats for a given type can be overridden  for  specific
       properties.

       The  locations  searched  are  in order: the format if any specified with the property name (as in 8x
       WM_NAME), the formats defined by -f options in last to first order, the contents of the  file  speci-fied specified
       fied  by  the  -fs  option  if  any, the contents of the file specified by the environmental variable
       XPROPFORMATS if any, and finally xprop's built in file of formats.

       The format of the files referred to by the -fs argument and the XPROPFORMATS variable is one or  more
       lines of the following form:

       name format [dformat]

       Where  name  is  either the name of a property or the name of a type, format is the format to be used
       with name and dformat is the dformat to be used with name.  If dformat is not present, " = $0+\n"  is
       assumed.

EXAMPLES
       To display the name of the root window: xprop -root WM_NAME

       To display the window manager hints for the clock: xprop -name xclock WM_HINTS

       To display the start of the cut buffer: xprop -root -len 100 CUT_BUFFER0

       To display the point size of the fixed font: xprop -font fixed POINT_SIZE

       To display all the properties of window # 0x200007: xprop -id 0x200007

ENVIRONMENT
       DISPLAY To get default display.

       XPROPFORMATS
               Specifies the name of a file from which additional formats are to be obtained.


SEE ALSO
       X(7), xdpyinfo(1), xwininfo(1), xdriinfo(1), glxinfo(1), xvinfo(1)

AUTHOR
       Mark Lillibridge, MIT Project Athena



X Version 11                                     xprop 1.0.4                                        XPROP(1)

Reporting Problems

The way to report a problem with this manual page depends on the type of problem:

Content errors
Report errors in the content of this documentation with the feedback links below.
Bug reports
Report bugs in the functionality of the described tool or API through Bug Reporter.
Formatting problems
Report formatting mistakes in the online version of these pages with the feedback links below.

Did this document help you? Yes It's good, but... Not helpful...