Change opacity of single window












2















I notice Xubuntu can let me change the opacity of inactive windows, which seems nice for having small videos playing while showing my terminal below. But it quickly gets annoying when doing anything else – I don't want every inactive window transparent, and I'd rather not go into settings all the time to turn it off. Can I just set it for one window?



(Bonus points for turning it into a script that can both set transparancy, always-on-top, and remove window decorations)










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    2















    I notice Xubuntu can let me change the opacity of inactive windows, which seems nice for having small videos playing while showing my terminal below. But it quickly gets annoying when doing anything else – I don't want every inactive window transparent, and I'd rather not go into settings all the time to turn it off. Can I just set it for one window?



    (Bonus points for turning it into a script that can both set transparancy, always-on-top, and remove window decorations)










    share|improve this question

























      2












      2








      2








      I notice Xubuntu can let me change the opacity of inactive windows, which seems nice for having small videos playing while showing my terminal below. But it quickly gets annoying when doing anything else – I don't want every inactive window transparent, and I'd rather not go into settings all the time to turn it off. Can I just set it for one window?



      (Bonus points for turning it into a script that can both set transparancy, always-on-top, and remove window decorations)










      share|improve this question














      I notice Xubuntu can let me change the opacity of inactive windows, which seems nice for having small videos playing while showing my terminal below. But it quickly gets annoying when doing anything else – I don't want every inactive window transparent, and I'd rather not go into settings all the time to turn it off. Can I just set it for one window?



      (Bonus points for turning it into a script that can both set transparancy, always-on-top, and remove window decorations)







      xubuntu xfce transparency xfwm4






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      asked Jan 26 '17 at 22:13









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          I stumbled upon two possible solutions. In the Whisker menu, type "xfconf" and open the Settings editor, scroll down to "xfwm" on the left and then in the main table either




          • disable zoom_desktop – now you can alt+mousescroll on the titlebar of the window you want to be transparent


          or




          • enable horiz_scroll_opacity – now you can mousescroll-sideways on the titlebar of the window you want to be transparent (I prefer this, that way I can still do alt-scrolling for zooming, should I ever need that)






          share|improve this answer
























          • I had to click the programs menu (aka Start menu in Windows speak), then open Settings Editor then in there, from the left Channel column choose xfwm4 and then I can see the zoom_desktop and horiz_scroll_opacity -- source (wiki.xfce.org/tips#control_per-window_transparency)

            – nmz787
            4 mins ago











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          1 Answer
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          active

          oldest

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          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          2














          I stumbled upon two possible solutions. In the Whisker menu, type "xfconf" and open the Settings editor, scroll down to "xfwm" on the left and then in the main table either




          • disable zoom_desktop – now you can alt+mousescroll on the titlebar of the window you want to be transparent


          or




          • enable horiz_scroll_opacity – now you can mousescroll-sideways on the titlebar of the window you want to be transparent (I prefer this, that way I can still do alt-scrolling for zooming, should I ever need that)






          share|improve this answer
























          • I had to click the programs menu (aka Start menu in Windows speak), then open Settings Editor then in there, from the left Channel column choose xfwm4 and then I can see the zoom_desktop and horiz_scroll_opacity -- source (wiki.xfce.org/tips#control_per-window_transparency)

            – nmz787
            4 mins ago
















          2














          I stumbled upon two possible solutions. In the Whisker menu, type "xfconf" and open the Settings editor, scroll down to "xfwm" on the left and then in the main table either




          • disable zoom_desktop – now you can alt+mousescroll on the titlebar of the window you want to be transparent


          or




          • enable horiz_scroll_opacity – now you can mousescroll-sideways on the titlebar of the window you want to be transparent (I prefer this, that way I can still do alt-scrolling for zooming, should I ever need that)






          share|improve this answer
























          • I had to click the programs menu (aka Start menu in Windows speak), then open Settings Editor then in there, from the left Channel column choose xfwm4 and then I can see the zoom_desktop and horiz_scroll_opacity -- source (wiki.xfce.org/tips#control_per-window_transparency)

            – nmz787
            4 mins ago














          2












          2








          2







          I stumbled upon two possible solutions. In the Whisker menu, type "xfconf" and open the Settings editor, scroll down to "xfwm" on the left and then in the main table either




          • disable zoom_desktop – now you can alt+mousescroll on the titlebar of the window you want to be transparent


          or




          • enable horiz_scroll_opacity – now you can mousescroll-sideways on the titlebar of the window you want to be transparent (I prefer this, that way I can still do alt-scrolling for zooming, should I ever need that)






          share|improve this answer













          I stumbled upon two possible solutions. In the Whisker menu, type "xfconf" and open the Settings editor, scroll down to "xfwm" on the left and then in the main table either




          • disable zoom_desktop – now you can alt+mousescroll on the titlebar of the window you want to be transparent


          or




          • enable horiz_scroll_opacity – now you can mousescroll-sideways on the titlebar of the window you want to be transparent (I prefer this, that way I can still do alt-scrolling for zooming, should I ever need that)







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Jan 26 '17 at 22:13









          unhammerunhammer

          1,42211832




          1,42211832













          • I had to click the programs menu (aka Start menu in Windows speak), then open Settings Editor then in there, from the left Channel column choose xfwm4 and then I can see the zoom_desktop and horiz_scroll_opacity -- source (wiki.xfce.org/tips#control_per-window_transparency)

            – nmz787
            4 mins ago



















          • I had to click the programs menu (aka Start menu in Windows speak), then open Settings Editor then in there, from the left Channel column choose xfwm4 and then I can see the zoom_desktop and horiz_scroll_opacity -- source (wiki.xfce.org/tips#control_per-window_transparency)

            – nmz787
            4 mins ago

















          I had to click the programs menu (aka Start menu in Windows speak), then open Settings Editor then in there, from the left Channel column choose xfwm4 and then I can see the zoom_desktop and horiz_scroll_opacity -- source (wiki.xfce.org/tips#control_per-window_transparency)

          – nmz787
          4 mins ago





          I had to click the programs menu (aka Start menu in Windows speak), then open Settings Editor then in there, from the left Channel column choose xfwm4 and then I can see the zoom_desktop and horiz_scroll_opacity -- source (wiki.xfce.org/tips#control_per-window_transparency)

          – nmz787
          4 mins ago


















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