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Command Reference >
toggle-borders
Remove borders around windows, use color to distinguish them. | Brief: Alt-F1 |
This command removes the borders around ordinary tiled windows,
letting the text regions occupy more of the screen. If the windows
have no borders already, this command restores them. When this command
reenables borders, it does so according to the settings of the
variables border-left, border-top, and so forth. Epsilon
displays a border only if the appropriate variable has been set, and
toggle-borders hasn't disabled all borders.
When there are no window borders, Epsilon provides each window with
its own separate color scheme, in place of the single one selected by
set-color. (You can still use set-color to set the individual
colors in a color scheme, but Epsilon doesn't care which particular
color scheme you select when it displays the contents of individual
windows. It does use the selected color scheme for other parts of the
screen like the echo area or screen border.)
The color schemes Epsilon uses for borderless windows have names like
"window-black", "window-blue" and so forth. Epsilon assigns them
to windows in the same order they appear in set-color. You can
remove one from consideration using the delete-name command, or
create a new one using set-color (give it a name starting with
"window-").
More info:
Window Borders
Epsilon Programmer's Editor 14.04 manual. Copyright (C) 1984, 2021 by Lugaru Software Ltd. All rights reserved.
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