Window Options
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Window Configuration Options
Section titled “Window Configuration Options”Wails provides comprehensive window configuration with dozens of options for size, position, appearance, and behaviour. This reference covers all available options across Windows, macOS, and Linux as the complete reference for WebviewWindowOptions. Every option, every platform, with examples and constraints.
WebviewWindowOptions Structure
Section titled “WebviewWindowOptions Structure”type WebviewWindowOptions struct { // Identity Name string Title string
// Size and Position Width int Height int X int Y int MinWidth int MinHeight int MaxWidth int MaxHeight int InitialPosition WindowStartPosition // WindowCentered (default) or WindowXY Screen *Screen // target screen for initial placement
// Initial State Hidden bool Frameless bool DisableResize bool // inverted vs v2's `Resizable` AlwaysOnTop bool StartState WindowState // WindowStateNormal | Minimised | Maximised | Fullscreen
// Appearance BackgroundColour RGBA BackgroundType BackgroundType Zoom float64 ZoomControlEnabled bool
// Content URL string HTML string JS string CSS string
// Behaviour EnableFileDrop bool IgnoreMouseEvents bool HideOnFocusLost bool DevToolsEnabled bool DefaultContextMenuDisabled bool ContentProtectionEnabled bool KeyBindings map[string]func(window *WebviewWindow)
// Window-control button states MinimiseButtonState ButtonState MaximiseButtonState ButtonState CloseButtonState ButtonState
// Menu UseApplicationMenu bool
// Platform-specific (per-window) Mac MacWindow Windows WindowsWindow Linux LinuxWindow}WebviewWindowOptions has no Parent field — for parent/modal relationships use parentWindow.AttachModal(childWindow). It also has no Assets field — asset configuration lives on application.Options (Assets AssetOptions).
Full source: v3/pkg/application/webview_window_options.go.
Core Options
Section titled “Core Options”Type: string
Default: Auto-generated UUID
Platform: All
Name: "main-window"Purpose: Unique identifier for finding windows later.
Best practices:
- Use descriptive names:
"main","settings","about" - Use kebab-case:
"file-browser","color-picker" - Keep it short and memorable
Example:
window := app.Window.NewWithOptions(application.WebviewWindowOptions{ Name: "settings-window",})
// Later...if settings, ok := app.Window.GetByName("settings-window"); ok { settings.Focus()}Type: string
Default: Application name
Platform: All
Title: "My Application"Purpose: Text shown in title bar and taskbar.
Dynamic updates:
window.SetTitle("My Application - Document.txt")Width / Height
Section titled “Width / Height”Type: int (pixels)
Default: 800 x 600
Platform: All
Constraints: Must be positive
Width: 1200,Height: 800,Purpose: Initial window size in logical pixels.
Notes:
- Wails handles DPI scaling automatically
- Use logical pixels, not physical pixels
- Consider minimum screen resolution (1024x768)
Example sizes:
| Use Case | Width | Height |
|---|---|---|
| Small utility | 400 | 300 |
| Standard app | 1024 | 768 |
| Large app | 1440 | 900 |
| Full HD | 1920 | 1080 |
Type: int (pixels)
Default: Centred on screen
Platform: All
X: 100, // 100px from left edgeY: 100, // 100px from top edgePurpose: Initial window position.
Coordinate system:
- (0, 0) is top-left of primary screen
- Positive X goes right
- Positive Y goes down
Example:
X and Y only take effect when InitialPosition: application.WindowXY is set. Without that, InitialPosition defaults to WindowCentered and X/Y are ignored.
settings := app.Window.NewWithOptions(application.WebviewWindowOptions{ Name: "coordinate-window", InitialPosition: application.WindowXY, // opt into X/Y coordinates X: 100, Y: 100,})Best practice: Use Center() to centre a window after creation if you don’t care about specific coordinates:
window := app.Window.New()window.Center()MinWidth / MinHeight
Section titled “MinWidth / MinHeight”Type: int (pixels)
Default: 0 (no minimum)
Platform: All
MinWidth: 400,MinHeight: 300,Purpose: Prevent window from being too small.
Use cases:
- Prevent broken layouts
- Ensure usability
- Maintain aspect ratio
Example:
// Prevent window smaller than 400x300MinWidth: 400,MinHeight: 300,MaxWidth / MaxHeight
Section titled “MaxWidth / MaxHeight”Type: int (pixels)
Default: 0 (no maximum)
Platform: All
MaxWidth: 1920,MaxHeight: 1080,Purpose: Prevent window from being too large.
Use cases:
- Fixed-size applications
- Prevent excessive resource usage
- Maintain design constraints
State Options
Section titled “State Options”Hidden
Section titled “Hidden”Type: bool
Default: false
Platform: All
Hidden: true,Purpose: Create window without showing it.
Use cases:
- Background windows
- Windows shown on demand
- Splash screens (create, load, then show)
- Prevent white flash while loading content
Platform improvements:
- Windows: Fixed white window flash - window stays invisible until
Show()is called - macOS: Full support
- Linux: Full support
Recommended pattern for smooth loading:
// Create hidden windowwindow := app.Window.NewWithOptions(application.WebviewWindowOptions{ Name: "main-window", Hidden: true, BackgroundColour: application.NewRGB(30, 30, 30), // Match your theme})
// Load content while hidden// ... content loads ...
// Show when ready (no flash!)window.Show()Example:
settings := app.Window.NewWithOptions(application.WebviewWindowOptions{ Name: "settings", Hidden: true,})
// Show when neededsettings.Show()Frameless
Section titled “Frameless”Type: bool
Default: false
Platform: All
Frameless: true,Purpose: Remove title bar and window borders.
Use cases:
- Custom window chrome
- Splash screens
- Kiosk applications
- Custom-designed windows
Important: You’ll need to implement:
- Window dragging
- Close/minimise/maximise buttons
- Resize handles (if resizable)
See Frameless Windows for details.
DisableResize
Section titled “DisableResize”Type: bool
Default: false (window is resizable by default)
Platform: All
DisableResize: true,Purpose: Prevent window resizing. Note that the field is the inverse of v2’s Resizable — set DisableResize: true to make a window non-resizable.
Use cases:
- Fixed-size applications
- Splash screens
- Dialogs
Note: Users can still maximise/fullscreen unless you also disable those via MaximiseButtonState / collection behaviour.
AlwaysOnTop
Section titled “AlwaysOnTop”Type: bool
Default: false
Platform: All
AlwaysOnTop: true,Purpose: Keep window above all other windows.
Use cases:
- Floating toolbars
- Notifications
- Picture-in-picture
- Timers
Platform notes:
- macOS: Full support
- Windows: Full support
- Linux: Depends on window manager
StartState
Section titled “StartState”Type: WindowState enum
Default: WindowStateNormal
Platform: All
StartState: application.WindowStateMaximised,Purpose: Initial state of the window when shown.
Values:
WindowStateNormal- Normal windowWindowStateMinimised- MinimisedWindowStateMaximised- MaximisedWindowStateFullscreen- Fullscreen
There is no WindowStateHidden constant — use the Hidden boolean field to start the window invisible.
Toggle fullscreen at runtime:
window.Fullscreen()window.UnFullscreen()window.ToggleFullscreen() // there is no SetFullscreen(bool)Appearance Options
Section titled “Appearance Options”BackgroundColour
Section titled “BackgroundColour”Type: RGBA struct
Default: White
Platform: All
BackgroundColour: application.RGBA{Red: 0, Green: 0, Blue: 0, Alpha: 255},RGBA fields are Red, Green, Blue, Alpha (uint8). Prefer the helpers application.NewRGB(r, g, b) (alpha 255) or application.NewRGBA(r, g, b, a).
Purpose: Window background colour before content loads.
Use cases:
- Match your app’s theme
- Prevent white flash on dark themes
- Smooth loading experience
Example:
// Dark themeBackgroundColour: application.NewRGB(30, 30, 30),
// Light themeBackgroundColour: application.NewRGB(255, 255, 255),Helper method:
window.SetBackgroundColour(application.NewRGB(30, 30, 30))BackgroundType
Section titled “BackgroundType”Type: BackgroundType enum
Default: BackgroundTypeSolid
Platform: macOS, Windows (partial)
BackgroundType: application.BackgroundTypeTranslucent,Values:
BackgroundTypeSolid- Solid colourBackgroundTypeTransparent- Fully transparentBackgroundTypeTranslucent- Semi-transparent blur
Platform support:
- macOS: All types supported
- Windows: Transparent and Translucent (Windows 11+)
- Linux: Solid only
Example (macOS):
BackgroundType: application.BackgroundTypeTranslucent,Mac: application.MacWindow{ Backdrop: application.MacBackdropTranslucent,},Content Options
Section titled “Content Options”Type: string
Default: Empty (loads from Assets)
Platform: All
URL: "https://example.com",Purpose: Load external URL instead of embedded assets.
Use cases:
- Development (load from dev server)
- Web-based applications
- Hybrid applications
Example:
// Development — point the window at the Vite dev serverURL: "http://localhost:9245",
// Production — embedded assets are configured at the application level// (Assets is application.Options.Assets, not a WebviewWindowOptions field).Application-level snippet for the production case:
app := application.New(application.Options{ Name: "My App", Assets: application.AssetOptions{ Handler: application.AssetFileServerFS(assets), },})Type: string
Default: Empty
Platform: All
HTML: "<h1>Hello World</h1>",Purpose: Load HTML string directly.
Use cases:
- Simple windows
- Generated content
- Testing
Example:
HTML: `<!DOCTYPE html><html><head><title>Simple Window</title></head><body><h1>Hello from Wails!</h1></body></html>`,Assets (application-level only)
Section titled “Assets (application-level only)”Asset configuration is not a WebviewWindowOptions field. Frontend assets are served by the application itself via application.Options.Assets (AssetOptions); every window inherits that asset server.
app := application.New(application.Options{ Assets: application.AssetOptions{ Handler: application.AssetFileServerFS(assets), },})See Build System for details.
UseApplicationMenu
Section titled “UseApplicationMenu”Type: bool
Default: false
Platform: Windows, Linux (no effect on macOS)
UseApplicationMenu: true,Purpose: Use the application menu (set via app.Menu.Set()) for this window.
On macOS, this option has no effect because macOS always uses a global application menu at the top of the screen.
On Windows and Linux, windows don’t display a menu by default. Setting UseApplicationMenu: true tells the window to use the application-level menu, providing a simple cross-platform solution.
Example:
// Set the application menu oncemenu := app.NewMenu()menu.AddRole(application.FileMenu)menu.AddRole(application.EditMenu)app.Menu.Set(menu)
// All windows with UseApplicationMenu will display this menuapp.Window.NewWithOptions(application.WebviewWindowOptions{ Title: "Main Window", UseApplicationMenu: true,})
app.Window.NewWithOptions(application.WebviewWindowOptions{ Title: "Second Window", UseApplicationMenu: true, // Also gets the app menu})Notes:
- If both
UseApplicationMenuand a window-specific menu are set, the window-specific menu takes priority - This simplifies cross-platform code by eliminating the need for runtime OS checks
- See Application Menus for complete menu documentation
Input Options
Section titled “Input Options”EnableFileDrop
Section titled “EnableFileDrop”Type: bool
Default: false
Platform: All
EnableFileDrop: true,Purpose: Enable drag-and-drop of files from the operating system into the window.
When enabled:
- Files dragged from file managers can be dropped into your application
- The
WindowFilesDroppedevent fires with the dropped file paths - Elements with
data-file-drop-targetattribute provide detailed drop information
Use cases:
- File upload interfaces
- Document editors
- Media importers
- Any app that accepts files
Example:
window := app.Window.NewWithOptions(application.WebviewWindowOptions{ Title: "File Uploader", EnableFileDrop: true,})
// Handle dropped fileswindow.OnWindowEvent(events.Common.WindowFilesDropped, func(event *application.WindowEvent) { files := event.Context().DroppedFiles() details := event.Context().DropTargetDetails()
for _, file := range files { fmt.Println("Dropped:", file) }})HTML drop zones:
<!-- Mark elements as drop targets --><div id="upload" data-file-drop-target> Drop files here</div>See File Drop for complete documentation.
Security Options
Section titled “Security Options”ContentProtectionEnabled
Section titled “ContentProtectionEnabled”Type: bool
Default: false
Platform: Windows (10+), macOS
ContentProtectionEnabled: true,Purpose: Prevent screen capture of window contents.
Platform support:
- Windows: Windows 10 build 19041+ (full), older versions (partial)
- macOS: Full support
- Linux: Not supported
Use cases:
- Banking applications
- Password managers
- Medical records
- Confidential documents
Important notes:
- Doesn’t prevent physical photography
- Some tools may bypass protection
- Part of comprehensive security, not sole protection
- DevTools windows not protected automatically
Example:
window := app.Window.NewWithOptions(application.WebviewWindowOptions{ Title: "Secure Window", ContentProtectionEnabled: true,})
// Toggle at runtimewindow.SetContentProtection(true)Window Lifecycle Events
Section titled “Window Lifecycle Events”Window lifecycle events are handled using OnWindowEvent and RegisterHook. These methods provide fine-grained control over window closing and destruction behavior.
Cancelling Window Close
Section titled “Cancelling Window Close”To prevent a window from closing (e.g., unsaved changes), use RegisterHook with the WindowClosing event and call event.Cancel():
window := app.Window.NewWithOptions(application.WebviewWindowOptions{ Name: "main-window", Title: "My Application",})
// Register a hook to intercept the closing eventwindow.RegisterHook(events.Common.WindowClosing, func(event *application.WindowEvent) { if hasUnsavedChanges() { // Ask user for confirmation result := showConfirmDialog("Unsaved changes. Close anyway?") if result != "yes" { // Cancel the close event event.Cancel() } }})Key points:
RegisterHookintercepts events before they occur- Call
event.Cancel()to prevent the window from closing - The window will remain open after cancelling
Handling Window Close
Section titled “Handling Window Close”To perform cleanup when a window closes, use OnWindowEvent with the WindowClosing event:
window.OnWindowEvent(events.Common.WindowClosing, func(event *application.WindowEvent) { // Cleanup code runs here fmt.Printf("Window %s is closing\n", window.Name())
// Close database connection if db != nil { db.Close() }
// Remove from window list removeWindow(window.ID())})Key points:
OnWindowEventhandles events that are about to happen- Cleanup runs before the window is destroyed
- Cannot cancel the close from here (use
RegisterHookfor that)
Singleton Window Cleanup Pattern
Section titled “Singleton Window Cleanup Pattern”For singleton windows (ensure only one instance), use WindowClosing to clean up the reference:
var settingsWindow *application.WebviewWindow
func ShowSettings(app *application.App) { // Create if doesn't exist if settingsWindow == nil { settingsWindow = app.Window.NewWithOptions(application.WebviewWindowOptions{ Name: "settings", Title: "Settings", Width: 600, Height: 400, })
// Cleanup on close settingsWindow.OnWindowEvent(events.Common.WindowClosing, func(event *application.WindowEvent) { settingsWindow = nil }) }
// Show and focus settingsWindow.Show() settingsWindow.Focus()}Platform-Specific Options
Section titled “Platform-Specific Options”Mac Options
Section titled “Mac Options”Mac: application.MacWindow{ TitleBar: application.MacTitleBar{ AppearsTransparent: true, Hide: false, HideTitle: true, FullSizeContent: true, }, Backdrop: application.MacBackdropTranslucent, InvisibleTitleBarHeight: 50, WindowLevel: application.MacWindowLevelNormal, CollectionBehavior: application.MacWindowCollectionBehaviorDefault,},TitleBar (MacTitleBar)
AppearsTransparent- Makes title bar transparent, content extends into title bar areaHide- Hides the title bar completelyHideTitle- Hides only the title textFullSizeContent- Extends content to full window size
Backdrop (MacBackdrop)
MacBackdropNormal- Standard opaque backgroundMacBackdropTranslucent- Blurred translucent backgroundMacBackdropTransparent- Fully transparent background
InvisibleTitleBarHeight (int)
- Height of invisible title bar area (for dragging)
- Only takes effect when the native title bar drag area is hidden — i.e. when the window is frameless (
Frameless: true) or uses a transparent title bar (AppearsTransparent: true) - Has no effect on standard windows with a visible title bar
WindowLevel (MacWindowLevel)
MacWindowLevelNormal- Standard window level (default)MacWindowLevelFloating- Floats above normal windowsMacWindowLevelTornOffMenu- Torn-off menu levelMacWindowLevelModalPanel- Modal panel levelMacWindowLevelMainMenu- Main menu levelMacWindowLevelStatus- Status window levelMacWindowLevelPopUpMenu- Pop-up menu levelMacWindowLevelScreenSaver- Screen saver level
CollectionBehavior (MacWindowCollectionBehavior)
Controls how the window behaves across macOS Spaces and fullscreen. These are bitmask values that can be combined using bitwise OR (|).
Space behavior:
MacWindowCollectionBehaviorDefault- Uses FullScreenPrimary (default, backwards compatible)MacWindowCollectionBehaviorCanJoinAllSpaces- Window appears on all SpacesMacWindowCollectionBehaviorMoveToActiveSpace- Moves to active Space when shownMacWindowCollectionBehaviorManaged- Default managed window behaviorMacWindowCollectionBehaviorTransient- Temporary/transient windowMacWindowCollectionBehaviorStationary- Stays stationary during Space switches
Window cycling:
MacWindowCollectionBehaviorParticipatesInCycle- Included in Cmd+` cyclingMacWindowCollectionBehaviorIgnoresCycle- Excluded from Cmd+` cycling
Fullscreen behavior:
MacWindowCollectionBehaviorFullScreenPrimary- Can enter fullscreen modeMacWindowCollectionBehaviorFullScreenAuxiliary- Can overlay fullscreen appsMacWindowCollectionBehaviorFullScreenNone- Disables fullscreen capabilityMacWindowCollectionBehaviorFullScreenAllowsTiling- Allows side-by-side tiling (macOS 10.11+)MacWindowCollectionBehaviorFullScreenDisallowsTiling- Prevents tiling (macOS 10.11+)
Example - Spotlight-like window:
// Window that appears on all Spaces AND can overlay fullscreen appsMac: application.MacWindow{ CollectionBehavior: application.MacWindowCollectionBehaviorCanJoinAllSpaces | application.MacWindowCollectionBehaviorFullScreenAuxiliary, WindowLevel: application.MacWindowLevelFloating,},Example - Single behavior:
// Window that can appear over fullscreen applicationsMac: application.MacWindow{ CollectionBehavior: application.MacWindowCollectionBehaviorFullScreenAuxiliary,},Windows Options (per-window)
Section titled “Windows Options (per-window)”The per-window struct is application.WindowsWindow — not WindowsOptions (that’s the application-level struct).
Windows: application.WindowsWindow{ DisableIcon: false, BackdropType: application.Auto, CustomTheme: application.ThemeSettings{}, DisableFramelessWindowDecorations: false,},DisableIcon (bool)
- Remove icon from title bar.
BackdropType (BackdropType)
application.Auto- System defaultapplication.None- No backdropapplication.Mica- Mica material (Windows 11)application.Acrylic- Acrylic material (Windows 11)application.Tabbed- Tabbed material (Windows 11)
There are no WindowsBackdropTypeMica-style constants — use application.Mica etc.
CustomTheme (ThemeSettings)
- Value (not pointer). Custom dark/light-mode colours for window border, title bar text/background, and menu bar.
DisableFramelessWindowDecorations (bool)
- Disable default frameless decorations (Aero shadow, rounded corners).
Example:
Windows: application.WindowsWindow{ BackdropType: application.Mica, DisableIcon: true,},Linux Options (per-window)
Section titled “Linux Options (per-window)”The per-window struct is application.LinuxWindow — not LinuxOptions.
Linux: application.LinuxWindow{ Icon: []byte{/* PNG data */}, WindowIsTranslucent: false,},Icon ([]byte)
- Window icon (PNG format).
WindowIsTranslucent (bool)
- Requires compositor support.
Example:
//go:embed icon.pngvar icon []byte
Linux: application.LinuxWindow{ Icon: icon,},Application-Level Windows Options
Section titled “Application-Level Windows Options”Some Windows-specific options must be configured at the application level rather than per-window. This is because WebView2 shares a single browser environment per user data path.
Browser Flags
Section titled “Browser Flags”WebView2 browser flags control experimental features and behavior across all windows in your application. These must be set in application.Options.Windows:
app := application.New(application.Options{ Name: "My App", Windows: application.WindowsOptions{ // Enable experimental WebView2 features EnabledFeatures: []string{ "msWebView2EnableDraggableRegions", },
// Disable specific features DisabledFeatures: []string{ "msSmartScreenProtection", // Always disabled by Wails },
// Additional Chromium command-line arguments AdditionalBrowserArgs: []string{ "--disable-gpu", "--remote-debugging-port=9222", }, },})EnabledFeatures ([]string)
- List of WebView2 feature flags to enable
- See WebView2 browser flags for available flags
- Example:
"msWebView2EnableDraggableRegions"
DisabledFeatures ([]string)
- List of WebView2 feature flags to disable
- Wails automatically disables
msSmartScreenProtection - Example:
"msExperimentalFeature"
AdditionalBrowserArgs ([]string)
- Chromium command-line arguments passed to the browser process
- Must include the
--prefix (e.g.,"--remote-debugging-port=9222") - See Chromium command line switches for available arguments
Complete Example:
package main
import ( "github.com/wailsapp/wails/v3/pkg/application")
func main() { app := application.New(application.Options{ Name: "My App", Windows: application.WindowsOptions{ // Enable draggable regions feature EnabledFeatures: []string{ "msWebView2EnableDraggableRegions", }, // Enable remote debugging AdditionalBrowserArgs: []string{ "--remote-debugging-port=9222", }, }, })
// All windows will use the browser flags configured above window := app.Window.NewWithOptions(application.WebviewWindowOptions{ Title: "Main Window", Width: 1024, Height: 768, })
window.Show() app.Run()}Complete Example
Section titled “Complete Example”Here’s a production-ready window configuration:
package main
import ( _ "embed" "github.com/wailsapp/wails/v3/pkg/application")
//go:embed frontend/distvar assets embed.FS
//go:embed icon.pngvar icon []byte
func main() { app := application.New(application.Options{ Name: "My Application", })
window := app.Window.NewWithOptions(application.WebviewWindowOptions{ // Identity Name: "main-window", Title: "My Application",
// Size and Position Width: 1200, Height: 800, MinWidth: 800, MinHeight: 600,
// Initial State StartState: application.WindowStateNormal,
// Appearance BackgroundColour: application.NewRGB(255, 255, 255),
// Platform-Specific (per-window structs) Mac: application.MacWindow{ TitleBar: application.MacTitleBar{ AppearsTransparent: true, }, Backdrop: application.MacBackdropTranslucent, },
Windows: application.WindowsWindow{ BackdropType: application.Mica, DisableIcon: false, },
Linux: application.LinuxWindow{ Icon: icon, }, })
window.Center() window.Show()
app.Run()}Frontend assets are served at the application level (application.Options.Assets), not per window.
Next Steps
Section titled “Next Steps”- Window Basics - Creating and controlling windows
- Multiple Windows - Multi-window patterns
- Frameless Windows - Custom window chrome
- Window Events - Lifecycle events