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522 lines
19 KiB
522 lines
19 KiB
<chapter id="tinkering-under-the-hood">
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<!-- Uncomment the <*info> below and add your name to be -->
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<!-- credited for writing this section. -->
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<!--
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<chapterinfo>
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<authorgroup>
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<author>
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<firstname>Your First Name here</firstname>
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<surname>Your Surname here </surname>
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</author>
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</authorgroup>
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</chapterinfo>
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-->
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<title>Tinkering Under the Hood of &kde;</title>
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<sect1 id="hand-editing-config-files">
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<sect1info>
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<author>
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<personname>
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<firstname>Nicolas</firstname>
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<surname>Goutte</surname>
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</personname>
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<email>goutte@kde.org</email>
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</author>
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</sect1info>
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<title>Hand-Editing Configuration Files</title>
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<sect2 id="hand-editing-intro">
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<title>Introduction</title>
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<para>In &kde;, the configuration files are easy to edit with a simple
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editor like &kate; as the configuration files are text files.</para>
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<para>An example of a text file:</para>
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<programlisting>[General]
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AutoSave=1
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LastFile=/var/tmp/test.txt</programlisting>
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<para>The user-specific configuration files are stored in <filename
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class="directory">.kde/share/config</filename> (replace
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<filename>.kde</filename> with your $<envar>KDEHOME</envar> setting) and
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the global ones are in the <filename
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class="directory">share/config</filename> sub-directory of &kde;'s
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installation path. (You can find this path by running the command
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<command>kde-config --prefix</command>.) Their filenames typically
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end in rc (without an initial period), for example <filename>kopeterc</filename>.</para>
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<warning><para>
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Editing configuration files by hand can risk the stability of your
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&kde; installation. Applications usually do not check what they read from the
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configuration files. This means that they can be disturbed by what they
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get as configuration and might even
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crash.</para></warning>
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</sect2>
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<sect2 id="hand-editing-backups">
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<title>Backups</title>
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<para>So the first rule is to make a backup of your file before modifying
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it. The backup is better stored outside any
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<filename class="directory">.kde</filename> subdirectory
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(or the corresponding $<envar>KDEHOME</envar> directory). Backups are anyway
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a good idea in case of a major failure of &kde; that would
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destroy important configuration files (for example your &kmail; settings,
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which are in in the file <filename>kmailrc</filename>).
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(Such a major failure should not happen but it still can happen.)</para>
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</sect2>
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<sect2 id="hand-editing">
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<title>Editing</title>
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<para>So why would you want to touch the configuration files at all? Well, first you need it
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when you want to enforce the KIOSK mode. Perhaps a developer has asked you
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to add an entry to help him to solve a problem with the application. Perhaps you want to recover from
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a problem without having to remove all the <filename
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class="directory">.kde</filename> directory. Perhaps you want to learn more
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about the depths of &kde;.</para>
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<para>Anyway, whatever your reason, you want to modify by hand a
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configuration file.</para>
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<para>When planning to edit such a file, make sure that the application
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using it is not running. If it is one of the basic configuration files,
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consider editing the file while &kde; is not running at all.</para>
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<para>Ready? So make a backup of the file (Did I tell you this already?),
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start you favorite editor (let us assume it is &kate;), load the file
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(Be careful to load as UTF-8, &kate; displays it as
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<quote>utf8</quote>).</para>
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<para>Now you have a file like:</para>
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<programlisting>[Group]
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Key1=Value1
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Key2=Value2
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Key3=Value3</programlisting>
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<para>You can now modify it (with care!) and then save it (Be sure that it
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is as <acronym>UTF-8</acronym> again).</para>
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<para>Now you can test the application and if the application does not run
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correctly anymore, close the application and restore the backup of the
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configuration file.</para>
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<itemizedlist>
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<title>Related Information</title>
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<listitem><para><xref linkend="kde-for-administrators"/> has more
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information about &kde;'s directory structure, to help you find the
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file you need to edit.</para>
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</listitem>
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</itemizedlist>
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</sect2>
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</sect1>
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<sect1 id="scripting-the-desktop">
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<title>Scripting the Desktop</title>
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<para>&kde; provides a powerful interprocess communication system in
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&DCOP;, the Desktop COmmunication Protocol. Using &DCOP;, you can
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control a wide range of functions in &kde; from the command line or
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from a script written in your favorite scripting language. You can
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also get information out of &kde; applications: for example, several
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&kde; media players provide methods to query the player for
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information about the currently-playing track.</para>
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<para>Broadly speaking, each &kde; application provides one or more
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&DCOP; <firstterm>interfaces</firstterm>, which in turn provide
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methods (or, if you prefer, functions) that another application can
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call. So, the first step in using &DCOP; is to find the appropriate
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method for the task. The easiest way to do this is using the
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<application>kdcop</application> frontend to the available &DCOP;
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methods.</para>
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<para>Run <application>kdcop</application> from a &konsole; or the
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mini-<acronym>CLI</acronym> (the window which pops up on <keycombo
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action="simul">&Alt;<keycap>F2</keycap> </keycombo>). The
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<application>kdcop</application> window shows the applications
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currently running which provide &DCOP; interfaces, using a tree
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view.
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<!-- TODO: Describe the search lineedit thingy -->
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In general, finding the correct method requires a little bit of
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searching through the tree view, but a useful hint is that the
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interface marked <quote>(default)</quote> usually contains the most
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frequently-used functions.</para>
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<para>To test that the function does what we expect, double-click on
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the <guilabel>setColor</guilabel> entry. To set the color
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<varname>c</varname>, click on the color selector button, and choose a
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color. Set whether the color should be color A with the
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checkbox. Click <guilabel>OK</guilabel> and the background color is
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set.</para>
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<para>To access the &DCOP; method from your favorite scripting
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language, you can either use &DCOP; bindings, if available in the
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kdebindings module, or call the <command>dcop</command> command-line
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application. For simple usage, calling the
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<command>dcop</command> command-line application is sufficient. To
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call a &DCOP; method on the command line, we need to specify the
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application and interface owning the method, the method itself, and
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the arguments, in a form suitable for the shell.</para>
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<para>We specify the application, interface and method in that order,
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followed by the arguments in the same order that they are shown in
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<application>kdcop</application>. <command>dcop</command>
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has plenty of other options: take a look at the output of
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<userinput><command>dcop</command>
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<option>--help</option></userinput>.</para>
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<para>That's enough theory: time for an example:</para>
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<example>
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<title>A Background Color Changing Script with &DCOP;</title>
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<para>With the <command>dcop</command> command-line application and a
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little bit of Perl, we're going to make a simple script which slowly
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cycles the desktop background through the spectrum.</para>
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<para>Firstly, we look for the appropriate method with
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<application>kdcop</application>. For this example, we'll short
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circuit the searching, and go straight to it: the method we want is
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<menuchoice><guimenu>kdesktop</guimenu><guisubmenu>KBackgroundIface</guisubmenu><guimenuitem>setColor</guimenuitem>
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</menuchoice>. The arguments and return type of the function are shown
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in the style of the C++ language. For
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<methodname>setColor</methodname>, the arguments are a color,
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<varname>c</varname>, which specifies the new background color, and a
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boolean (true or false) value, <varname>isColorA</varname>, which
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specifies whether the color is the first or second (this is useful for
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setting gradients and so on).</para>
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<para>To use our <methodname>setColor</methodname> method on the
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command line, we use the following:
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<screen>
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<prompt>%</prompt> <userinput><command>dcop</command> kdesktop KBackgroundIface setColor '#ffffff' false</userinput>
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</screen>
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</para>
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<para>To specify the color, we used the
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hexadecimal RGB value, as used in &HTML;. Note that it is enclosed in
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single quotes to protect the <token>#</token> from the shell.</para>
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<para>To find the hexadecimal RGB value of a color, open any
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color chooser dialog in a &kde; application (for example, in
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&kcontrolcenter;, <menuchoice><guimenu>Appearance & Themes</guimenu><guimenuitem>Colors</guimenuitem>
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</menuchoice>), select the color you want, and use the value given in
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the <guilabel>HTML</guilabel> text box.</para>
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<para>So, that's all we need from &DCOP;; now it's just a case of
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writing a script around it. Here's a (very!) rough implementation:
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<programlisting>
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<![CDATA[
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$min=49; # Minimum value of R, G, or B colour
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$max=174; # Maximum value of R, G, or B colour
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$step=5; # Amount to step colour by on each step
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$sleeptime=15; # Interval in seconds between each step
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@start = ($max, $min, $min);
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@colour = @start;
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while (1) {
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foreach (0..5) {
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my $which = $_ % 3; # Which colour (R, G or B) to change
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my $updown = $_ % 2; # Whether to increase or decrease the colour value
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do {
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if ($updown == 0) { $colour[$which]+=$step; }
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if ($updown == 1) { $colour[$which]-=$step; }
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my $dcopcall=sprintf "dcop kdesktop KBackgroundIface setColor '#%x%x%x' true\n", @colour;
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system($dcopcall);
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sleep $sleeptime;
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} while (($colour[$which] >= $min) and ($colour[$which] <= $max));
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}
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}
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]]>
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</programlisting>
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</para>
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<para>Just run the script with no arguments, and it will cycle the
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background colour through a slightly muted spectrum until it is
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killed. <foreignphrase>Voilà</foreignphrase>!</para>
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</example>
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<para>Of course, Perl isn't the only language you can use to write
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scripts with &DCOP;—if you prefer shell scripting, that's
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available too:</para>
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<example>
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<title>Setting a background from the Internet</title>
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<para>The following script gets the main image from the <quote>User
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Friendly</quote> comic strip and sets it as the desktop wallpaper,
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using commonly available tools and a little bit of &DCOP;:</para>
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<programlisting>
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<![CDATA[
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#!/bin/sh
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COMICURL=`wget -qO - http://www.userfriendly.org/static/index.html | \
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grep Latest | sed -e "s,.*SRC=\",," -e "s,\">.*,,"`
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TMPFILE=`mktemp /tmp/$0.XXXXXX` || exit 1
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wget -q -O $TMPFILE $COMICURL
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dcop kdesktop KBackgroundIface setWallpaper $TMPFILE 1
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]]>
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</programlisting>
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<para>The first line after the #!/bin/sh uses <command>wget</command> and some regular
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expression magic to extract the image location from the main page's
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&HTML; source. The second and third lines download the image, and
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finally, <command>dcop</command> sets the downloaded image as
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wallpaper.</para>
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</example>
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<!-- <itemizedlist>
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<title>Related Information</title>
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<listitem><para>to be written</para>
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</listitem>
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</itemizedlist> -->
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</sect1>
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<sect1 id="adding-extra-keys">
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<title>Adding Extra Keybindings to &kde;</title>
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<para>Many modern keyboards contain extra keys that are not by default
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assigned to any action.</para>
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<para><quote>Multimedia</quote> keys often generate a signal, and can simply
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be chosen as a keybinding within an application just like choosing any other
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key. Some keys however, are not detected and pressing them in a
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<guilabel>Configure Shortcuts</guilabel> has no effect.</para>
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<para>Some IBM laptops, for instance, have extra keys about the left and right
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arrows, which look like <guiicon>page left</guiicon> and <guiicon>page
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right</guiicon>.</para>
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<procedure>
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<step><para>Use <command>xev</command> to find the code of the keys. In
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this case, they are 233 and 234 <!-- TODO: Very briefly how to use xev here -->
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</para></step>
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<step><para>Choose key symbols. There are quite a range of these that are not
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used by default, so many are free. You can find the list in
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<filename>/usr/X11R6/include/X11/keysymdef.h</filename> (or its equivalent
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on your system).</para></step>
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<step><para>Create a file in your home directory called
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<filename>.Xmodmap</filename>, and add to it the following:</para>
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<screen>keycode 233 = Next_Virtual_Screen
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keycode 234 = Prev_Virtual_Screen</screen>
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</step>
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<step><para>Run the command <userinput><command>xmodmap</command>
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<filename>~/.Xmodmap</filename></userinput></para></step>
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</procedure>
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<para>At this point, you should be able to run <command>xev</command> again
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and see that the keys now generate the keysym that you assigned. You can now
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simply assign them to any action as normal.</para>
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<itemizedlist>
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<title>Related Information</title>
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<listitem><para>The <command>xev</command> manpage. You can see this by typing
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<userinput>man:/xev</userinput> into a &konqueror; window or by typing
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<userinput><command>man</command> xev</userinput> into a terminal.</para></listitem>
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</itemizedlist>
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</sect1>
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<sect1 id="keys-for-scripts">
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<title>Adding Keybindings for New Actions</title>
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<para>Most actions in either the desktop or in applications are readily
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available to assign a keybinding to. If the action you want a
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shortcut for is something you wrote yourself, or is otherwise not available,
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you can still assign a shortcut.</para>
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<para>To bring together the two previous sections, perhaps you want to
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assign an otherwise unused key on your keyboard to a script or dcop
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command. Our example here will be to assign the two keys we added
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in <xref linkend="adding-extra-keys"/> to go to the previous or
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next virtual desktop, two functions for which you will need DCOP (as discussed in
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<xref linkend="scripting-the-desktop"/>).</para>
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<para>This can be achieved easily using the following method:</para>
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<procedure>
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<step>
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<para>Open &kcontrol;, and in the <guilabel>Regional & Accessibility</guilabel>
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section, select <guilabel>Input Action</guilabel></para>
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</step>
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<step>
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<para>Choose <guibutton>New Action</guibutton></para>
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</step>
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<step>
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<para>Name the new action, ⪚ <userinput>Next Virtual
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Screen</userinput></para>
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</step>
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<step>
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<para>Select <guilabel>Keyboard shortcut -> Command/URL (simple)</guilabel>
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for the <guilabel>Action type:</guilabel></para>
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</step>
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<step>
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<para>In the <guilabel>Keyboard Shortcut</guilabel> tab, click the button
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you wish to use to trigger the command. For this example, you would press
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the one with the <guiicon>Next Page</guiicon> picture on it.
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<keysym>Next_Virtual_Screen</keysym> will appear in the key image.</para>
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</step>
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<step>
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<para>In the <guilabel>Command/URL Settings</guilabel> tab, enter the
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command to run in the field: <userinput><command>dcop kwin default
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nextDesktop</command></userinput></para>
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</step>
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</procedure>
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<para>Repeat the above with the <keysym>Prev_Virtual_Screen</keysym> key and
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<userinput><command>dcop kwin default
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previousDesktop</command></userinput>.</para>
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<para>Now pressing the <keysym>Prev_Virtual_Screen</keysym> or
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<keysym>Next_Virtual_Screen</keysym> will switch you to the previous or next
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virtual desktop, respectively.</para>
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<para>Obviously you can assign any free key to any action.</para>
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<itemizedlist>
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<title>Related Information</title>
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<listitem><para>See the <application>KHotKeys</application> documentation by
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looking it up in &khelpcenter;, or typing
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<userinput>help:/khotkeys</userinput> in a &konqueror;
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window.</para></listitem>
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<listitem><para><xref linkend="adding-extra-keys"/></para></listitem>
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<listitem><para><xref linkend="scripting-the-desktop"/></para></listitem>
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</itemizedlist>
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</sect1>
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<sect1 id="kdebugdialog">
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<sect1info>
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<authorgroup>
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<author>
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<personname>
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<firstname>Adriaan</firstname>
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<surname>de Groot</surname>
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</personname>
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<email>groot@kde.org</email>
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</author>
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</authorgroup>
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</sect1info>
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<title>&kdebugdialog; - Controlling &kde;'s Debugging Output</title>
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<sect2 id="kdebugdialog-basic-usage">
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<title>Basic Usage</title>
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<para>&kdebugdialog; is not in the &kmenu; by default. You will need to run
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it from the shell or from the mini-CLI <!-- link to CLI, for sure --> with
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the command <userinput><command>kdebugdialog</command></userinput>.
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&kdebugdialog; pops up a window with a long list of debugging areas. Each
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area has a checkbox that you can check or uncheck <!-- perhaps
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select/deselect --> in order to enable or disable debugging output for
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that part of &kde;.</para>
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<para>The list of debugging areas is sorted numerically, not alphabetically,
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so kio (127) comes before artskde (400). The numbers go up to 200000 or so,
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but there are really only 400 areas. You don't have to scroll through the
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entire list to find the area you need, though. There is a line edit <!--
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text-entry ? --> box at the top of the dialog where you can enter a part of
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the name of the area you want. The list of entries that is displayed is
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filtered to include only those debug areas that contain the text you have
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entered. ⪚ entering <userinput>k</userinput> does not filter very much at
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all, but entering <userinput>kont</userinput> <!-- that's "butt" in dutch,
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haha --> will show you just the &kontact; debugging areas. As an even
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quicker way of enabling or disabling debugging output, there are also
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<guibutton>select all</guibutton> and <guibutton>deselect all</guibutton>
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buttons which will cause &kde; to produce a mountain of debugging output, or
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very little.</para>
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</sect2>
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<sect2 id="kdebugdialog-fullmode">
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<title>KDebugDialog in full mode</title>
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<!-- this text partly taken from the kdebugdialog handbook -->
|
|
|
|
<para>In full mode, which is what you get when you start kdebugdialog as
|
|
<userinput><command>kdebugdialog</command>
|
|
<option>--fullmode</option></userinput>, the same list of debugging areas
|
|
as in plain mode is available, but you can select only one at a time from a
|
|
drop-down <!-- combo? --> box. You may then independently set the output
|
|
for various types of messages: Information, Warning, Error and Fatal Error.
|
|
For each of these types, you can choose where the messages are sent. The
|
|
choices are:</para>
|
|
|
|
<para>File, in which case you can enter a filename. This file is written into your
|
|
$<envar>HOME</envar> directory.</para>
|
|
|
|
<para>Message Box. Each debugging message is displayed in an information dialog,
|
|
which you must <guibutton>OK</guibutton> to continue with the
|
|
application.</para>
|
|
|
|
<para>Shell, the default entry. Messages are printed to stderr, and will appear
|
|
either in the shell window where the application was started, or
|
|
in <filename>.xsession-errors</filename>.</para>
|
|
|
|
<para>Syslog. This sends each debugging message to the system's syslog facility,
|
|
which can perform its own processing of the message.</para>
|
|
|
|
<para>None. This suppresses the output of this type of message.</para>
|
|
|
|
<para>For messages generated by fatal errors, it is generally a bad idea to choose
|
|
None or Syslog, since in both cases you most likely will not see the message
|
|
and the application that encounters the fatal error will vanish without
|
|
leaving a clue as to why it vanishes. Whether or not the application will
|
|
vanish on fatal errors can be controlled by the checkbox <guilabel>abort on
|
|
fatal errors</guilabel>, which is checked by default — but you might
|
|
expect an application to crash (in a messy fashion) if a fatal error is
|
|
encountered anyway.</para>
|
|
|
|
<!-- Add links to "further reading" here -->
|
|
<!-- <itemizedlist>
|
|
<title>Related Information</title>
|
|
<listitem><para>to be written</para>
|
|
</listitem>
|
|
</itemizedlist>-->
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
</sect2>
|
|
</sect1>
|
|
</chapter>
|
|
|
|
<!-- Keep this comment at the end of the file
|
|
Local variables:
|
|
mode: xml
|
|
sgml-omittag:nil
|
|
sgml-shorttag:nil
|
|
sgml-namecase-general:nil
|
|
sgml-general-insert-case:lower
|
|
sgml-minimize-attributes:nil
|
|
sgml-always-quote-attributes:t
|
|
sgml-indent-step:0
|
|
sgml-indent-data:true
|
|
sgml-parent-document:("index.docbook" "book" "chapter")
|
|
sgml-exposed-tags:nil
|
|
sgml-local-catalogs:nil
|
|
sgml-local-ecat-files:nil
|
|
End:
|
|
-->
|