Copyright | (c) glasser@mit.edu |
---|---|
License | BSD |
Maintainer | glasser@mit.edu |
Stability | stable |
Portability | unportable |
Safe Haskell | None |
Language | Haskell2010 |
Handy wrapper for dzen. Requires dzen >= 0.2.4.
Synopsis
- dzenConfig :: DzenConfig -> String -> X ()
- type DzenConfig = (Int, [String]) -> X (Int, [String])
- timeout :: Rational -> DzenConfig
- font :: String -> DzenConfig
- xScreen :: ScreenId -> DzenConfig
- vCenter :: Int -> ScreenId -> DzenConfig
- hCenter :: Int -> ScreenId -> DzenConfig
- center :: Int -> Int -> ScreenId -> DzenConfig
- onCurr :: (ScreenId -> DzenConfig) -> DzenConfig
- x :: Int -> DzenConfig
- y :: Int -> DzenConfig
- addArgs :: [String] -> DzenConfig
- fgColor :: String -> DzenConfig
- bgColor :: String -> DzenConfig
- align :: Align -> DzenConfig
- slaveAlign :: Align -> DzenConfig
- lineCount :: Int -> DzenConfig
- dzen :: String -> Int -> X ()
- dzenScreen :: ScreenId -> String -> Int -> X ()
- dzenWithArgs :: String -> [String] -> Int -> X ()
- seconds :: Rational -> Int
- chomp :: String -> String
- (>=>) :: Monad m => (a -> m b) -> (b -> m c) -> a -> m c
Flexible interface
dzenConfig :: DzenConfig -> String -> X () Source #
dzenConfig config s
will display the string s
according to the
configuration config
. For example, to display the string "foobar"
with
all the default settings, you can simply call
dzenConfig return "foobar"
Or, to set a longer timeout, you could use
dzenConfig (timeout 10) "foobar"
You can combine configurations with the (>=>) operator. To display
"foobar"
for 10 seconds on the first screen, you could use
dzenConfig (timeout 10 >=> xScreen 0) "foobar"
As a final example, you could adapt the above to display "foobar"
for
10 seconds on the current screen with
dzenConfig (timeout 10 >=> onCurr xScreen) "foobar"
timeout :: Rational -> DzenConfig Source #
Set the timeout, in seconds. This defaults to 3 seconds if not specified.
font :: String -> DzenConfig Source #
Specify the font. Check out xfontsel to get the format of the String right; if your dzen supports xft, then you can supply that here, too.
xScreen :: ScreenId -> DzenConfig Source #
Start dzen2 on a particular screen. Only works with versions of dzen that support the "-xs" argument.
vCenter :: Int -> ScreenId -> DzenConfig Source #
vCenter height sc
sets the configuration to have the dzen bar appear
on screen sc
with height height
, vertically centered with respect to
the actual size of that screen.
hCenter :: Int -> ScreenId -> DzenConfig Source #
hCenter width sc
sets the configuration to have the dzen bar appear
on screen sc
with width width
, horizontally centered with respect to
the actual size of that screen.
center :: Int -> Int -> ScreenId -> DzenConfig Source #
center width height sc
sets the configuration to have the dzen bar
appear on screen sc
with width width
and height height
, centered
both horizontally and vertically with respect to the actual size of that
screen.
onCurr :: (ScreenId -> DzenConfig) -> DzenConfig Source #
Take a screen-specific configuration and supply it with the screen ID of the currently focused screen, according to xmonad. For example, show a 100-pixel wide bar centered within the current screen, you could use
dzenConfig (onCurr (hCenter 100)) "foobar"
Of course, you can still combine these with (>=>); for example, to center
the string "foobar"
both horizontally and vertically in a 100x14 box
using the lovely Terminus font, you could use
terminus = "-*-terminus-*-*-*-*-12-*-*-*-*-*-*-*" dzenConfig (onCurr (center 100 14) >=> font terminus) "foobar"
x :: Int -> DzenConfig Source #
Put the top of the dzen bar at a particular pixel.
y :: Int -> DzenConfig Source #
Put the left of the dzen bar at a particular pixel.
addArgs :: [String] -> DzenConfig Source #
Add raw command-line arguments to the configuration. These will be passed on verbatim to dzen2. The default includes no arguments.
fgColor :: String -> DzenConfig Source #
Set the foreground color.
Please be advised that fgColor
and bgColor
also exist in XMonad.Prompt.
If you use both modules, you might have to tell the compiler which one you mean:
import XMonad.Prompt as P import XMonad.Util.Dzen as D dzenConfig (D.fgColor "#f0f0f0") "foobar"
bgColor :: String -> DzenConfig Source #
Set the background color.
align :: Align -> DzenConfig Source #
Set the alignment of the title (main) window content.
Note that AlignRightOffset
is treated as equal to AlignRight
.
import XMonad.Util.Font (Align(..)) dzenConfig (align AlignLeft) "foobar"
slaveAlign :: Align -> DzenConfig Source #
Set the alignment of the slave window content.
Using this option only makes sense if you also use the lineCount
parameter.
lineCount :: Int -> DzenConfig Source #
Enable slave window and specify the number of lines.
Dzen can optionally draw a second window underneath the title window. By default, this window is only displayed if the mouse enters the title window. This option is only useful if the string you want to display contains more than one line.
Legacy interface
dzen :: String -> Int -> X () Source #
dzen str timeout
pipes str
to dzen2 for timeout
microseconds.
Example usage:
dzen "Hi, mom!" (5 `seconds`)
dzenScreen :: ScreenId -> String -> Int -> X () Source #
dzenScreen sc str timeout
pipes str
to dzen2 for timeout
microseconds, and on screen sc
.
Requires dzen to be compiled with Xinerama support.
dzenWithArgs :: String -> [String] -> Int -> X () Source #
dzen str args timeout
pipes str
to dzen2 for timeout
seconds, passing args
to dzen.
Example usage:
dzenWithArgs "Hi, dons!" ["-ta", "r"] (5 `seconds`)
Miscellaneous
seconds :: Rational -> Int Source #
Multiplies by ONE MILLION, for functions that take microseconds.
Use like:
(5.5 `seconds`)
In GHC 7 and later, you must either enable the PostfixOperators extension (by adding
{-# LANGUAGE PostfixOperators #-}
to the top of your file) or use seconds in prefix form:
seconds 5.5