2d571d6d07
From the Debian patch: http://sources.debian.net/src/wmclock/1.0.14-6/debian/patches/add_interval_option.patch/ For more information, see: https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=228986 |
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lang.breton | ||
lang.croatian | ||
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lang.dutch | ||
lang.english | ||
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lang.french2 | ||
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xpm | ||
.depend | ||
ChangeLog | ||
configure | ||
COPYING | ||
dynlist.c | ||
dynlist.h | ||
Imakefile | ||
INSTALL | ||
month.xpm | ||
README | ||
weekday.xpm | ||
wmclock.c | ||
wmclock.man | ||
wmclock.man.in | ||
wmclock.spec.in |
# README: notes about wmclock # created 1999-Apr-10 jmk _______________________ |O| About wmclock |X| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Wmclock is an applet which displays the date and time in a dockable tile in the same style as the clock from the NEXTSTEP(tm) operating system. Wmclock is specially designed for the Window Maker window manager, by Alfredo Kojima, and features multiple language support, twenty-four-hour and twelve-hour (am/pm) time display, and, optionally, can run a user-specified program on a mouse click. Wmclock is derived from asclock, a similar clock for the AfterStep window manager. ____________________________ |O| Installing wmclock |X| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Please see the INSTALL file accompanying the wmclock source for instructions on installing wmclock. _________________________ |O| Getting Started |X| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Wmclock is designed especially for Window Maker; hence, putting wmclock into your Window Maker dock is quick and easy. After you've installed wmclock according to the instructions, there are three steps: (1) Start wmclock. The easiest way to accomplish this is to accept the defaults for things such as led color, blinking, etc, and just start the clock: wmclock (2) Drag the resulting wmclock appicon to an empty slot in your dock. You can do this in one of two fashions: (a) Position the mouse pointer over a portion of the appicon tile that is not covered by wmclock's LED display or calendar display. Press the primary mouse button (usually the left one) and drag to the dock. This requires a little bit of precision in aiming the mouse, but requires no keyboard action. (b) Hold down the [Alt] or [Meta] key (whichever one you have configured Window Maker to use), position the mouse pointer over any part of the wmlock appicon, press the primary mouse button (usually the left one), and drag to the dock. This method requires less precision, but requires you to press and hold a key while dragging. (3) Set wmclock to launch when Window Maker starts. Press the menu mouse button (usually the right one) on the portion of the docked wmclock tile that is not covered by wmclock's LED display or calendar display to bring up the dock icon menu, and choose `Settings...'. In the resulting dialog, check the box labelled `Start when Window Maker is started' and press `OK'. That's it! _________________________ |O| Troubleshooting |X| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ As with any dockable applet, there are a few possible `gotchas' with wmclock and Window Maker: - If you have the Clip set to `AutoAttract Icons', the wmclock appicon will appear in the Clip instead of on the desktop. If your Clip is collapsed, you won't be able to see the wmclock appicon, even though it's running. Make sure you uncollapse your Clip and look for wmclock there if it doesn't appear on your desktop. - If your Clip is too close to your dock, you may have difficulty docking wmclock, because the Clip may grab the wmclock appicon instead. Try moving your Clip farther away from your dock before docking wmclock. _________________________________________________ |O| Differences Between asclock and wmclock |X| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Wmclock is derived from asclock version 1.0.12 by Beat Christen. The major differences between asclock and wmclock are: (1) Asclock is designed for use with the AfterStep window manager. To use asclock with Window Maker, a patch is required. Wmclock is better behaved with Window Maker and requires no patch or special command-line options; it `just works'. (2) Wmclock corrects a few of asclock's aesthetic defects. Most notably, the `off-by-one-pixel' defect at the lefthand side of the LED display is corrected. (3) Asclock use a simple system() call to execute the command specified using the `-exe' command-line option; this method could create lots of unwanted zombie processes. Wmclock cleans up its chiled processes every so often to eliminate the zombies. Also, if no command was specified when asclock was started, it would output a message warning that no command was specified each time you click the mouse on asclock window area. Wmclock does not output that message; if no command was specified, wmclock simply does nothing when you click on it. Other minor differences include: (1) The `-shape' and `-iconic' command-line options are no longer needed with wmclock. Wmclock recognizes them for backwards compatibility with asclock, but they have no effect. (2) Asclock contained an arbitrary limitation on the length of the command (approximately 50 characters) that you could specify with the `-exe' option. Wmclock removes that arbitrary limitation and cleans up the code significantly in the process. _______________________________________________________ |O| Authors, Copyright, License, Disclaimer, etc. |X| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Wmclock is Copyright (C) 1999 by Jim Knoble <jmknoble@pobox.com>. Significant portions of wmclock are directly derived from asclock by Beat Christen <spiff@longstreet.ch>, who, along with asclock's other authors, owns the copyright to those portions of wmclock. Wmclock is licensed under the GNU General Public License, version 2, or (at your option) any later version. See <http://www.gnu.org/> for more information. The software is provided ``as is'', without warranty of any kind, express or implied, including but not limited to the warranties of merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose and noninfringement. In no event shall the author(s) be liable for any claim, damages or other liability, whether in an action of contract, tort or otherwise, arising from, out of or in connection with the software or the use or other dealings in the software. Your mileage may vary. Eat your vegetables. -- Bruce Cran <bruce@bluestop.org>