FvwmAnimate(1) Fvwm Modules FvwmAnimate(1)NAMEFvwmAnimate - the fvwm animate module
SYNOPSIS
Module FvwmAnimate [ModuleAlias]
FvwmAnimate can only be invoked by fvwm. Command line invocation of
the FvwmAnimate module will not work.
From within the .fvwm2rc file, FvwmAnimate is spawned as follows:
Module FvwmAnimate
or from within an fvwm pop-up menu:
DestroyMenu Module-Popup
AddToMenu Module-Popup "Modules" Title
+ "Fvwm Animate Icons" Module FvwmAnimate ModuleAlias
DESCRIPTION
The FvwmAnimate module animates iconification and de-iconification or
on command. There are currently 6 different animation effects.
INVOCATIONFvwmAnimate must be invoked by the fvwm window manager. When invoked
with the OptionalName argument, the ModuleAlias is used to find config‐
uration commands, configuration files, and name the internally gener‐
ated menus and forms instead of "FvwmAnimate". During startup, FvwmAn‐
imate defines menus and forms for configuring and controlling FvwmAni‐
mate. The default menu name is "MenuFvwmAnimate" and the form name is
"FormFvwmAnimate". If the optional name is used, the menu would be
"Menu<ModuleAlias>" and the form would be "Form<ModuleAlias>".
Assuming you already had a builtin menu called "Module-Popup", you
could use FvwmAnimate by configuring it like this:
AddToFunc "StartFunction" "I" Module FvwmAnimate
AddToMenu "Module-Popup" "Control Animation" Popup MenuFvwmAnimate
CONFIGURATION OPTIONS
Since the pop up menu "MenuFvwmAnimate" allows complete control of the
FvwmAnimate module, you don't really have to know what any of the con‐
figuration commands are. This section describes them anyway.
FvwmAnimate gets configuration info from fvwm's module configuration
database (see fvwm(1), section MODULE COMMANDS). In addition, FvwmAni‐
mate reads the file $HOME/.FvwmAnimate, and accepts commands from fvwm
and its modules as it runs.
If ModuleAlias is used to start FvwmAnimate, the optional name is used
in all commands, messages, menus and forms generated by FvwmAnimate
and in the configuration file name. Unlike other fvwm modules, there
is little reason to use the optional name.
*FvwmAnimate: Color color
Tells FvwmAnimate what color to draw with. The color is
"XOR'ed" (exclusive ORed) onto the background. Depending on the
display type you are using, the effect this causes will vary.
Especially on 8-bit displays, it helps if the background is a
solid color. You have to experiment with this to see how it
works.
The default color is not really a color and can be entered as
"Black^White", or more simply "None". This is the same as the
default XOR mask used by fvwm for move and resize frames.
Other colors can be specified using standard X color notation.
Ie. color names like "LightBlue", or RGB values like "#FFFFFF".
*FvwmAnimate: Pixmap pixmap
Tells FvwmAnimate to use pixmap to draw with. This can be useful
if *FvwmAnimate: Color gives poor results.
*FvwmAnimate: Delay msecs
Tells FvwmAnimate how many milliseconds to sleep between frames
of animation.
*FvwmAnimate: Iterations iterations
Tells FvwmAnimate how many steps to break the animation into.
*FvwmAnimate: Twist twist
Tells FvwmAnimate how many revolutions to twist the iconifica‐
tion frame.
*FvwmAnimate: Width width
Tells FvwmAnimate how wide a line to draw with. The default
width of 0 (zero) is a fast line of Width 1.
*FvwmAnimate: Effect mode
Tells FvwmAnimate which animation effect to use. Currently the
effects are: Frame, Lines, Flip, Turn, Zoom3D, Twist Random, and
None. None is normally set in the configuration file, in-case
FvwmAnimate is started automatically, but an individual user
doesn't want it running.
*FvwmAnimate: Stop
Tells FvwmAnimate to stop.
*FvwmAnimate: Save
Tells FvwmAnimate to save the current configuration in a file
named ".FvwmAnimate" in the users home directory. This same
file is read automatically by FvwmAnimate during startup.
COMMANDSFvwmAnimate can be asked to produce an animation thru the "SendToMod‐
ule" command. The format of the command is:
SendToModule FvwmAnimate animate sx sy sw sh dx dy dw dh
The second word must match the name FvwmAnimate is started with. The 8
fields after animate must be numbers. The first 4 are for the source
(or starting) location of the animation. The last 4 are for the desti‐
nation of the animation. The 2 pairs of 4 numbers, represent rectan‐
gles. The first 2 numbers are the x and y location of the upper right
corner. The next 2 numbers are the width and height. One or more spa‐
ces can separate the fields in the command.
Modules can use the "SendToModule" command to animate "NoIcon" windows,
or you can think up your own ways to have all kinds of fun with this
command.
Additional available commands are: pause, play, push, pop and reset.
These may be space separated.
pause causes a module to not temporarily produce any animations. play
causes a module to produce an animation again. push stores the current
playing state for a future and pop restores it. reset removes all
stored states and sets playing on.
Suppose, we don't want to wait for all 40 xterms to be animated:
SendToModule FvwmAnimate pause
All (XTerm) Iconify on
And if we don't want to damage the current playing state, then:
SendToModule FvwmAnimate push pause
All (XTerm) Iconify on
SendToModule FvwmAnimate pop
ORIGINFvwmAnimate is based on the Animate module from Afterstep 1.5pre6.
Porting to fvwm and lots of other changes were done by Dan Espen
<despen@telcordia.com>. Below are the original author and acknowledg‐
ments.
AUTHOR
Alfredo Kengi Kojima <kojima@inf.ufrgs.br>
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
These people have contributed to FvwmAnimate:
Kaj Groner <kajg@mindspring.com>
Twisty iconification, configuration file parsing, man page.
Frank Scheelen <scheelen@worldonline.nl>
3rd Berkeley Distribution 7 May 208 (2.5.26)FvwmAnimate(1)