234fd83caa6443e45d1384a770b18adfac095aa3
[clfswm.git] / doc / menu.html
blob234fd83caa6443e45d1384a770b18adfac095aa3
1 <html>
2 <head>
3 <title>
4 CLFSWM Menu
5 </title>
6 </head>
7 <body>
8 <h1>
9 <a name="top">
10 CLFSWM Menu
11 </a>
12 </h1>
13 <p>
14 Here is the map of the CLFSWM menu:
15 (By default it is bound on second-mode + m)
16 </p>
17 <h3>
18 <a name="MAIN"></a><a href="#Top">Main</a>
19 </h3>
20 <p>
21 F1: <a href="#HELP-MENU">< Help menu ></a>
22 </p>
23 <p>
24 d: <a href="#STANDARD-MENU">< Standard menu ></a>
25 </p>
26 <p>
27 c: <a href="#CHILD-MENU">< Child menu ></a>
28 </p>
29 <p>
30 r: <a href="#ROOT-MENU">< Root menu ></a>
31 </p>
32 <p>
33 f: <a href="#FRAME-MENU">< Frame menu ></a>
34 </p>
35 <p>
36 w: <a href="#WINDOW-MENU">< Window menu ></a>
37 </p>
38 <p>
39 s: <a href="#SELECTION-MENU">< Selection menu ></a>
40 </p>
41 <p>
42 n: <a href="#ACTION-BY-NAME-MENU">< Action by name menu ></a>
43 </p>
44 <p>
45 u: <a href="#ACTION-BY-NUMBER-MENU">< Action by number menu ></a>
46 </p>
47 <p>
48 y: <a href="#UTILITY-MENU">< Utility menu ></a>
49 </p>
50 <p>
51 o: <a href="#CONFIGURATION-MENU">< Configuration menu ></a>
52 </p>
53 <p>
54 m: <a href="#CLFSWM-MENU">< CLFSWM menu ></a>
55 </p>
56 <hr>
57 <h3>
58 <a name="HELP-MENU"></a><a href="#MAIN">Help-Menu</a>
59 </h3>
60 <p>
61 a: Show the first aid kit key binding
62 </p>
63 <p>
64 h: Show all key binding
65 </p>
66 <p>
67 b: Show the main mode binding
68 </p>
69 <p>
70 s: Show the second mode key binding
71 </p>
72 <p>
73 r: Show the circulate mode key binding
74 </p>
75 <p>
76 e: Show the expose window mode key binding
77 </p>
78 <p>
79 c: Help on clfswm corner
80 </p>
81 <p>
82 g: Show all configurable variables
83 </p>
84 <p>
85 d: Show the current time and date
86 </p>
87 <p>
88 p: Show current processes sorted by CPU usage
89 </p>
90 <p>
91 m: Show current processes sorted by memory usage
92 </p>
93 <p>
94 v: Show the current CLFSWM version
95 </p>
96 <p>
97 F2: <a href="#MPD-MENU">< Music Player Daemon (MPD) menu ></a>
98 </p>
99 <p>
100 x: <a href="#XMMS-MENU">< XMMS menu ></a>
101 </p>
103 i: <a href="#CDPLAYER-MENU">< CDPLAYER menu ></a>
104 </p>
105 <hr>
106 <h3>
107 <a name="MPD-MENU"></a><a href="#HELP-MENU">Mpd-Menu</a>
108 </h3>
110 i: Show MPD informations
111 </p>
113 p: Play the previous song in the current playlist
114 </p>
116 n: Play the next song in the current playlist
117 </p>
119 t: Toggles Play/Pause, plays if stopped
120 </p>
122 y: Start playing
123 </p>
125 k: Stop the currently playing playlists
126 </p>
128 x: Seeks to +5%
129 </p>
131 w: Seeks to -5%
132 </p>
134 l: Show the current MPD playlist
135 </p>
137 s: Start sonata
138 </p>
140 g: Start gmpc
141 </p>
142 <hr>
143 <h3>
144 <a name="XMMS-MENU"></a><a href="#HELP-MENU">Xmms-Menu</a>
145 </h3>
147 r: Lanch XMMS
148 </p>
150 s: Show the current xmms status
151 </p>
153 l: Show the current xmms playlist
154 </p>
156 n: Play the next XMMS track
157 </p>
159 p: Play the previous XMMS track
160 </p>
162 e: open xmms "Load file(s)" dialog window.
163 </p>
164 <hr>
165 <h3>
166 <a name="CDPLAYER-MENU"></a><a href="#HELP-MENU">Cdplayer-Menu</a>
167 </h3>
169 y: Start playing CD
170 </p>
172 k: Stop playing CD
173 </p>
175 t: Toggle pause
176 </p>
178 s: Show the current CD status
179 </p>
181 l: Show the current CD playlist
182 </p>
184 n: Play the next CD track
185 </p>
187 p: Play the previous CD track
188 </p>
190 e: Eject CD
191 </p>
193 c: Close CD
194 </p>
195 <hr>
196 <h3>
197 <a name="STANDARD-MENU"></a><a href="#MAIN">Standard-Menu</a>
198 </h3>
200 a: <a href="#TEXTEDITOR">< TEXTEDITOR ></a>
201 </p>
203 b: <a href="#FILEMANAGER">< FILEMANAGER ></a>
204 </p>
206 c: <a href="#WEBBROWSER">< WEBBROWSER ></a>
207 </p>
209 d: <a href="#AUDIOVIDEO">< AUDIOVIDEO ></a>
210 </p>
212 e: <a href="#AUDIO">< AUDIO ></a>
213 </p>
215 f: <a href="#VIDEO">< VIDEO ></a>
216 </p>
218 g: <a href="#DEVELOPMENT">< DEVELOPMENT ></a>
219 </p>
221 h: <a href="#EDUCATION">< EDUCATION ></a>
222 </p>
224 i: <a href="#GAME">< GAME ></a>
225 </p>
227 j: <a href="#GRAPHICS">< GRAPHICS ></a>
228 </p>
230 k: <a href="#NETWORK">< NETWORK ></a>
231 </p>
233 l: <a href="#OFFICE">< OFFICE ></a>
234 </p>
236 m: <a href="#SETTINGS">< SETTINGS ></a>
237 </p>
239 n: <a href="#SYSTEM">< SYSTEM ></a>
240 </p>
242 o: <a href="#UTILITY">< UTILITY ></a>
243 </p>
245 p: <a href="#TERMINALEMULATOR">< TERMINALEMULATOR ></a>
246 </p>
248 q: <a href="#SCREENSAVER">< SCREENSAVER ></a>
249 </p>
250 <hr>
251 <h3>
252 <a name="TEXTEDITOR"></a><a href="#STANDARD-MENU">Texteditor</a>
253 </h3>
255 a: Snippets datafile editor
256 </p>
258 b: Kate
259 </p>
261 c: KWrite
262 </p>
264 d: Xournal - Take handwritten notes
265 </p>
267 e: Leafpad - Simple text editor
268 </p>
270 f: gedit - Edit text files
271 </p>
273 g: GNU Emacs 23 - View and edit files
274 </p>
276 h: Xfwrite - A simple text editor for Xfe
277 </p>
278 <hr>
279 <h3>
280 <a name="FILEMANAGER"></a><a href="#STANDARD-MENU">Filemanager</a>
281 </h3>
283 a: Krusader
284 </p>
286 b: Dolphin
287 </p>
289 c: GNOME Commander - A two paned file manager
290 </p>
292 d: File Manager - Configure the Thunar file manager
293 </p>
295 e: Open Folder with Thunar - Open the specified folders in Thunar
296 </p>
298 f: Worker - File manager for X.
299 </p>
301 g: Xfe - A lightweight file manager for X Window
302 </p>
304 h: Thunar File Manager - Browse the filesystem with the file manager
305 </p>
307 i: Gentoo - Fully GUI-configurable, two-pane X file manager
308 </p>
309 <hr>
310 <h3>
311 <a name="WEBBROWSER"></a><a href="#STANDARD-MENU">Webbrowser</a>
312 </h3>
314 a: Konqueror
315 </p>
317 b: Bookmark Editor - Bookmark Organizer and Editor
318 </p>
320 c: Web Browser
321 </p>
323 d: Web - Browse the web
324 </p>
326 e: Midori - Lightweight web browser
327 </p>
329 f: Iceweasel - Browse the World Wide Web
330 </p>
332 g: Midori Private Browsing - Open a new private browsing window
333 </p>
335 h: Web - Browse the web
336 </p>
338 i: Conkeror Web Browser - Browse the World Wide Web
339 </p>
341 j: Links 2
342 </p>
343 <hr>
344 <h3>
345 <a name="AUDIOVIDEO"></a><a href="#STANDARD-MENU">Audiovideo</a>
346 </h3>
348 a: Dragon Player
349 </p>
351 b: KMix
352 </p>
354 c: KsCD
355 </p>
357 d: JuK
358 </p>
360 e: Qsampler - Qsampler is a LinuxSampler Qt GUI Interface
361 </p>
363 f: Composite - Live performance sequencer
364 </p>
366 g: Swami Instrument Editor - Create, play and organize MIDI instruments and sounds
367 </p>
369 h: QjackCtl - QjackCtl is a JACK Audio Connection Kit Qt GUI Interface
370 </p>
372 i: Rhythmbox - Play and organize your music collection
373 </p>
375 j: Musique - Play your music collection
376 </p>
378 k: HasciiCam - (h)ascii for the masses!
379 </p>
381 l: MediathekView - View streams from public German TV stations
382 </p>
384 m: Sonata - An elegant GTK+ MPD client
385 </p>
387 n: Stopmotion - Program to create stop-motion animations
388 </p>
390 o: Gnome Music Player Client - A gnome frontend for the mpd daemon
391 </p>
393 p: PulseAudio Volume Control - Adjust the volume level
394 </p>
396 q: GNOME ALSA Mixer - ALSA sound mixer for GNOME
397 </p>
399 r: Mixer - Audio mixer for the Xfce Desktop Environment
400 </p>
402 s: Alsa Modular Synth - Modular Software Synth
403 </p>
405 t: VLC media player - Read, capture, broadcast your multimedia streams
406 </p>
408 u: Petri-Foo - Sound Sampler
409 </p>
411 v: Sound Juicer - Copy music from your CDs
412 </p>
414 w: PulseAudio Volume Meter (Playback) - Monitor the output volume
415 </p>
417 x: Rhythmbox - Play and organize your music collection
418 </p>
420 y: Brasero - Create and copy CDs and DVDs
421 </p>
423 z: Audacity - Record and edit audio files
424 </p>
426 0: Cheese - Take photos and videos with your webcam, with fun graphical effects
427 </p>
429 1: Sound Recorder - Record sound clips
430 </p>
432 2: OpenShot Video Editor - Create and edit videos and movies
433 </p>
435 3: terminatorX - Scratch and mix audio
436 </p>
438 4: Decibel Audio Player - A simple audio player
439 </p>
441 5: Movie Player - Play movies and songs
442 </p>
444 6: QVideoob - Search for videos on many websites, and get info about them
445 </p>
447 7: PulseAudio Volume Meter (Capture) - Monitor the input volume
448 </p>
450 8: Specimen - Sound Sampler
451 </p>
453 9: Music Player - Play your music files easily
454 </p>
455 <hr>
456 <h3>
457 <a name="AUDIO"></a><a href="#STANDARD-MENU">Audio</a>
458 </h3>
460 a: KMix
461 </p>
463 b: Qsampler - Qsampler is a LinuxSampler Qt GUI Interface
464 </p>
466 c: Composite - Live performance sequencer
467 </p>
469 d: Swami Instrument Editor - Create, play and organize MIDI instruments and sounds
470 </p>
472 e: QjackCtl - QjackCtl is a JACK Audio Connection Kit Qt GUI Interface
473 </p>
475 f: Musique - Play your music collection
476 </p>
478 g: PulseAudio Volume Control - Adjust the volume level
479 </p>
481 h: Mixer - Audio mixer for the Xfce Desktop Environment
482 </p>
484 i: Alsa Modular Synth - Modular Software Synth
485 </p>
487 j: Petri-Foo - Sound Sampler
488 </p>
490 k: Sound Juicer - Copy music from your CDs
491 </p>
493 l: PulseAudio Volume Meter (Playback) - Monitor the output volume
494 </p>
496 m: Audacity - Record and edit audio files
497 </p>
499 n: Sound Recorder - Record sound clips
500 </p>
502 o: Decibel Audio Player - A simple audio player
503 </p>
505 p: PulseAudio Volume Meter (Capture) - Monitor the input volume
506 </p>
508 q: Music Player - Play your music files easily
509 </p>
510 <hr>
511 <h3>
512 <a name="VIDEO"></a><a href="#STANDARD-MENU">Video</a>
513 </h3>
515 a: Camorama Webcam Viewer - View, alter and save images from a webcam
516 </p>
518 b: Stopmotion - Program to create stop-motion animations
519 </p>
521 c: OptGeo - Interactive tool to study and simulate optic assemblies
522 </p>
524 d: OpenShot Video Editor - Create and edit videos and movies
525 </p>
527 e: Movie Player - Play movies and songs
528 </p>
529 <hr>
530 <h3>
531 <a name="DEVELOPMENT"></a><a href="#STANDARD-MENU">Development</a>
532 </h3>
534 a: KLinkStatus
535 </p>
537 b: Cervisia
538 </p>
540 c: Lokalize
541 </p>
543 d: Umbrello
544 </p>
546 e: KUIViewer
547 </p>
549 f: KImageMapEditor
550 </p>
552 g: Kompare
553 </p>
555 h: KAppTemplate
556 </p>
558 i: KCachegrind - Visualization of Performance Profiling Data
559 </p>
561 j: Akonadi Console - Akonadi Management and Debugging Console
562 </p>
564 k: Scilab CLI - Scientific software package for numerical computations
565 </p>
567 l: Scilab - Scientific software package for numerical computations
568 </p>
570 m: Scilab advanced CLI - Scientific software package for numerical computations
571 </p>
573 n: IDLE (using Python-2.7) - Integrated Development Environment for Python (using Python-2.7)
574 </p>
576 o: IDLE - Integrated Development Environment for Python
577 </p>
579 p: Python (v2.6) - Python Interpreter (v2.6)
580 </p>
582 q: Python (v3.2) - Python Interpreter (v3.2)
583 </p>
585 r: IDLE (using Python-3.2) - Integrated Development Environment for Python (using Python-3.2)
586 </p>
588 s: IDLE 3 - Integrated DeveLopment Environment for Python3
589 </p>
591 t: Python (v2.7) - Python Interpreter (v2.7)
592 </p>
594 u: IDLE (using Python-2.6) - Integrated Development Environment for Python (using Python-2.6)
595 </p>
597 v: GNU Emacs 23 - View and edit files
598 </p>
600 w: Squeak - Programming system and content development tool
601 </p>
602 <hr>
603 <h3>
604 <a name="EDUCATION"></a><a href="#STANDARD-MENU">Education</a>
605 </h3>
607 a: Kig - Explore Geometric Constructions
608 </p>
610 b: Rocs - Graph Theory Tool for Professors and Students.
611 </p>
613 c: KWordQuiz - A flashcard and vocabulary learning program
614 </p>
616 d: Marble
617 </p>
619 e: KHangMan - KDE Hangman Game
620 </p>
622 f: Step - Simulate physics experiments
623 </p>
625 g: Parley
626 </p>
628 h: KTurtle
629 </p>
631 i: KStars - Desktop Planetarium
632 </p>
634 j: KmPlot - Function Plotter
635 </p>
637 k: Kiten - Japanese Reference and Study Tool
638 </p>
640 l: KGeography - A Geography Learning Program
641 </p>
643 m: KLettres - a KDE program to learn the alphabet
644 </p>
646 n: Blinken - A memory enhancement game
647 </p>
649 o: KBruch - Practice exercises with fractions
650 </p>
652 p: KTouch
653 </p>
655 q: Cantor
656 </p>
658 r: Kanagram - KDE Letter Order Game
659 </p>
661 s: Kalzium - KDE Periodic Table of Elements
662 </p>
664 t: KAlgebra - Math Expression Solver and Plotter
665 </p>
667 u: Dr.Geo - Dr.Geo Math Tool
668 </p>
670 v: Tux Math - Tux Math - Learn math with Tux!
671 </p>
673 w: Euler
674 </p>
676 x: Scilab CLI - Scientific software package for numerical computations
677 </p>
679 y: MathWar - A simple math game for kids
680 </p>
682 z: GeoGebra - Create interactive mathematical constructions and applets.
683 </p>
685 0: Maxima Algebra System - An interface to the Maxima Computer Algebra System
686 </p>
688 1: Tux Paint
689 </p>
691 2: Scilab - Scientific software package for numerical computations
692 </p>
694 3: K3DSurf - tool for mathematical surfaces
695 </p>
697 4: Tux Typing - Educational typing tutor game starring Tux
698 </p>
700 5: Childsplay - Suite of educational games for young children
701 </p>
703 6: Scilab advanced CLI - Scientific software package for numerical computations
704 </p>
706 7: Geomview - Interactive geometry viewing program
707 </p>
709 8: OptGeo - Interactive tool to study and simulate optic assemblies
710 </p>
712 9: Klavaro - Yet another touch typing tutor
713 </p>
715 A: wxMaxima - Perform symbolic and numeric calculations using Maxima
716 </p>
718 B: Regina - Software for 3-manifold topology and normal surface theory
719 </p>
721 C: CaRMetal - CaRMetal interactive geometry
722 </p>
724 D: python-whiteboard
725 </p>
727 E: AWeather - Advanced weather reporting program
728 </p>
730 F: Xcas Computer Algebra System - The swiss knife for mathematics
731 </p>
733 G: Squeak - Programming system and content development tool
734 </p>
736 H: Educational suite GCompris - Educational game for ages 2 to 10
737 </p>
738 <hr>
739 <h3>
740 <a name="GAME"></a><a href="#STANDARD-MENU">Game</a>
741 </h3>
743 a: Kolf
744 </p>
746 b: KJumpingCube
747 </p>
749 c: Klickety
750 </p>
752 d: Bovo
753 </p>
755 e: Palapeli
756 </p>
758 f: KSnake
759 </p>
761 g: KSpaceDuel
762 </p>
764 h: KPatience
765 </p>
767 i: KMines
768 </p>
770 j: Kiriki
771 </p>
773 k: KBlackBox
774 </p>
776 l: Naval Battle
777 </p>
779 m: Bomber
780 </p>
782 n: Kubrick
783 </p>
785 o: Konquest
786 </p>
788 p: Kolor Lines
789 </p>
791 q: KSquares
792 </p>
794 r: KHangMan - KDE Hangman Game
795 </p>
797 s: KMahjongg
798 </p>
800 t: KsirK
801 </p>
803 u: KDiamond
804 </p>
806 v: KNetWalk
807 </p>
809 w: KAtomic
810 </p>
812 x: Killbots
813 </p>
815 y: KBlocks
816 </p>
818 z: KReversi
819 </p>
821 0: KBounce
822 </p>
824 1: Blinken - A memory enhancement game
825 </p>
827 2: Kigo
828 </p>
830 3: Potato Guy
831 </p>
833 4: KBreakOut
834 </p>
836 5: LSkat
837 </p>
839 6: KGoldrunner - A game of action and puzzle-solving
840 </p>
842 7: Kapman - Eat pills escaping ghosts
843 </p>
845 8: Granatier
846 </p>
848 9: AMOR
849 </p>
851 A: Kanagram - KDE Letter Order Game
852 </p>
854 B: Kollision - A simple ball dodging game
855 </p>
857 C: Shisen-Sho
858 </p>
860 D: KSudoku - KSudoku, Sudoku game & more for KDE
861 </p>
863 E: KSnakeDuel
864 </p>
866 F: KFourInLine
867 </p>
869 G: Kajongg - The ancient Chinese board game for 4 players
870 </p>
872 H: SameGame
873 </p>
875 I: KsirK Skin Editor
876 </p>
878 J: Xboard - Resume XBoard chess tourney
879 </p>
881 K: Frogatto - Young frog's adventure
882 </p>
884 L: Four-in-a-Row - Make lines of the same color to win
885 </p>
887 M: pyRacerz
888 </p>
890 N: Out Of Order - Adventure Game
891 </p>
893 O: Plee the Bear - Catch your son, he ate all the honey then ran away
894 </p>
896 P: I Have No Tomatoes - How many tomatoes can you smash in ten short minutes?
897 </p>
899 Q: FreeCraft - The War begins
900 </p>
902 R: FreeGish - A physics based arcade game
903 </p>
905 S: Neverball - A 3D arcade game with a ball
906 </p>
908 T: SDL-Ball
909 </p>
911 U: FreeDinkedit - Portable Dink Smallwood game editor
912 </p>
914 V: PyChess - PyChess is a fully featured, nice looking, easy to use chess client for the Gnome desktop
915 </p>
917 W: PlayOnLinux - PlayOnLinux
918 </p>
920 X: REminiscence - A port of FlashBack game engine
921 </p>
923 Y: Gravitation - game about mania, melancholia, and the creative process
924 </p>
926 Z: OpenArena - A fast-paced 3D first-person shooter, similar to id Software Inc.'s Quake III Arena
927 </p>
929 |: The Ur-Quan Masters - An interstellar adventure game
930 </p>
932 |: Golly - A Conway's Game of Life simulator
933 </p>
935 |: Chromium B.S.U. - Scrolling space shooter
936 </p>
938 |: Virus Killer
939 </p>
941 |: Swell Foop - Clear the screen by removing groups of colored and shaped tiles
942 </p>
944 |: Xmoto
945 </p>
947 |: LordsAWar Editor - Create or Edit LordsAWar maps
948 </p>
950 |: Primrose - Captivating tile-clearing puzzle game
951 </p>
953 |: Biniax-2 - Colorful Logic game with arcade and tactics modes
954 </p>
956 |: Galaga:Hyperspace - Play enhanced Galaga Game
957 </p>
959 |: MegaGlest - A real time strategy game.
960 </p>
962 |: koules - Push your enemies away, but stay away from obstacles
963 </p>
965 |: XBoard - Use an X Windows Chess Board
966 </p>
968 |: Xboard - Resume XBoard chess tourney
969 </p>
971 |: Bouncy the Hungry Rabbit - Eat the yummy veggies in the garden (game for small kids)
972 </p>
974 |: Battle for Wesnoth Map Editor (1.10) - A map editor for Battle for Wesnoth maps
975 </p>
977 |: DFArc - Dink frontend - Run, edit, install, remove and package D-Mods (Dink Modules)
978 </p>
980 |: ii-esu - HIZ's ES
981 </p>
983 |: Amphetamine - Fight evil monsters with your magic weapons.
984 </p>
986 |: Galaga - Play Galaga Game
987 </p>
989 |: Xboard - Resume XBoard chess tourney
990 </p>
992 |: Adanaxis - Fly your ship in a 4d environment
993 </p>
995 |: Flight of the Amazon Queen - Embark on a quest to rescue a kidnapped princess and in the process, discover the true sinister intentions of a suspiciously located Lederhosen company
996 </p>
998 |: Sudoku - Test your logic skills in this number grid puzzle
999 </p>
1001 |: Monster Masher - Mash monsters and save the gnomes
1002 </p>
1004 |: SuperTuxKart
1005 </p>
1007 |: LordsAWar Army Editor - Create or Edit LordsAWar armies
1008 </p>
1010 |: DOSBox Emulator - Run old DOS applications
1011 </p>
1013 |: Childsplay - Suite of educational games for young children
1014 </p>
1016 |: Egoboo - 3D dungeon crawling game
1017 </p>
1019 |: X Slash'EM - Super Lotsa Added Stuff Hack - Extended Magic (X11)
1020 </p>
1022 |: Tuxfootball - 2D Football Game
1023 </p>
1025 |: Biloba - Up to four player network capable turn based strategy board game
1026 </p>
1028 |: GTK Slash'EM - Super Lotsa Added Stuff Hack - Extended Magic (GTK)
1029 </p>
1031 |: The Mana world - The Mana World 2D MMORPG client
1032 </p>
1034 |: Lights Off - Turn off all the lights
1035 </p>
1037 |: PIX Frogger - Help the frog cross the street
1038 </p>
1040 |: Robots - Avoid the robots and make them crash into each other
1041 </p>
1043 |: Tali - Beat the odds in a poker-style dice game
1044 </p>
1046 |: Trackballs
1047 </p>
1049 |: Raincat - 2D puzzle game featuring a fuzzy little cat
1050 </p>
1052 |: Tetravex - Complete the puzzle by matching numbered tiles
1053 </p>
1055 |: Freedroid - Clear a spaceship from all droids
1056 </p>
1058 |: Magicor - Puzzle game in the spirit of solomon's key
1059 </p>
1061 |: Kiki the nano bot
1062 </p>
1064 |: FreeDink - Humorous zelda-like isometric adventure/RPG
1065 </p>
1067 |: Tower Toppler - A clone of the 'Nebulus' game on old 8 and 16 bit machines.
1068 </p>
1070 |: Klotski - Slide blocks to solve the puzzle
1071 </p>
1073 |: eboard - A graphical chessboard program
1074 </p>
1076 |: Word War vi - side-scrolling shoot'em up arcade game
1077 </p>
1079 |: Lugaru - Third-person action game about an anthropomorphic rabbit with curiously well developed combat skills
1080 </p>
1082 |: B.A.L.L.Z. - Platform game with some puzzle elements
1083 </p>
1085 |: Mana - A 2D MMORPG client
1086 </p>
1088 |: PokerTH - Texas hold'em game
1089 </p>
1091 |: AisleRiot Solitaire - Play many different solitaire games
1092 </p>
1094 |: Dodgin Diamond 2
1095 </p>
1097 |: OpenTTD
1098 </p>
1100 |: Alex the Allegator 4 - Retro platform game
1101 </p>
1103 |: Meritous - action-adventure dungeon crawl game
1104 </p>
1106 |: Amoebax - Defeat your opponent by filling up their grid up with garbage.
1107 </p>
1109 |: Angband (SDL) - A roguelike dungeon exploration game based on the books of J.R.R.Tolkien
1110 </p>
1112 |: Triplane Classic - side-scrolling dogfighting game
1113 </p>
1115 |: Pathological - Solve puzzles involving paths and marbles
1116 </p>
1118 |: Block Attack - Rise of the Blocks - Switch blocks so they match
1119 </p>
1121 |: Luola
1122 </p>
1124 |: Between - game about consciousness and isolation
1125 </p>
1127 |: Airstrike - Dogfight an enemy plane
1128 </p>
1130 |: X NetHack
1131 </p>
1133 |: Balazar - Play a 3D adventure and roleplaying game
1134 </p>
1136 |: Passage - game about the passage through life
1137 </p>
1139 |: Numpty Physics
1140 </p>
1142 |: FreeCell Solitaire - Play the popular FreeCell card game
1143 </p>
1145 |: Balder2D - 2D overhead shooter in Zero G
1146 </p>
1148 |: SDL Slash'EM - Super Lotsa Added Stuff Hack - Extended Magic (SDL)
1149 </p>
1151 |: FloboPuyo
1152 </p>
1154 |: Which Way is Up - 2D platform game with a slight rotational twist
1155 </p>
1157 |: Crack Attack - Puzzle game similar to Tetris Attack
1158 </p>
1160 |: LordsAWar - Play a clone of Warlords II
1161 </p>
1163 |: Hedgewars
1164 </p>
1166 |: Five or More - Remove colored balls from the board by forming lines
1167 </p>
1169 |: Bomberclone - Play a Bomberman like game
1170 </p>
1172 |: Heroes - Collect powerups and avoid your opponents' trails
1173 </p>
1175 |: Secret Maryo Chronicles - A 2D platform game with style similar to classic sidescroller games
1176 </p>
1178 |: Gunroar - Kenta Cho's Gunroar
1179 </p>
1181 |: Quadrapassel - Fit falling blocks together
1182 </p>
1184 |: Minetest - InfiniMiner/Minecraft-inspired open game world
1185 </p>
1187 |: Angband (GTK) - A roguelike dungeon exploration game based on the books of J.R.R.Tolkien
1188 </p>
1190 |: Neverputt - A 3D mini golf game
1191 </p>
1193 |: ScummVM - Interpreter for several adventure games
1194 </p>
1196 |: Liquid War - A unique multiplayer wargame
1197 </p>
1199 |: Angband (X11) - A roguelike dungeon exploration game based on the books of J.R.R.Tolkien
1200 </p>
1202 |: Mahjongg - Disassemble a pile of tiles by removing matching pairs
1203 </p>
1205 |: Foobillard - 3D billiards game using OpenGL
1206 </p>
1208 |: rRootage - Destroy autocreated battleships
1209 </p>
1211 |: VoR
1212 </p>
1214 |: Search and rescue
1215 </p>
1217 |: Chess - Play the classic two-player boardgame of chess
1218 </p>
1220 |: Freedroid RPG - Isometric role playing game
1221 </p>
1223 |: Billard-GL - Play Billard Game
1224 </p>
1226 |: Widelands - A a real-time build-up strategy game
1227 </p>
1229 |: Nibbles - Guide a worm around a maze
1230 </p>
1232 |: Ardentryst - Fantasy sidescroller game
1233 </p>
1235 |: Trophy - 2D car racing game with power-ups
1236 </p>
1238 |: Zatacka - Arcade multiplayer game for 2-6 players
1239 </p>
1241 |: Tumiki Fighters - Kenta Cho's Tumiki Fighters
1242 </p>
1244 |: Funny Boat - a side scrolling arcade shooter game on a steamboat
1245 </p>
1247 |: Tennix! - Play tennis against the computer or a friend
1248 </p>
1250 |: LordsAWar Tile Editor - Create or Edit LordsAWar tilesets
1251 </p>
1253 |: Battle for Wesnoth (1.10) - A fantasy turn-based strategy game
1254 </p>
1256 |: Feeding Frenzy! - multiplayer platform game with dwarfs fighting with/for food
1257 </p>
1259 |: Trigger - 3D rally racing car game
1260 </p>
1262 |: PCSX - Sony PlayStation emulator
1263 </p>
1265 |: Kobo Deluxe - Destroy enemy bases in space
1266 </p>
1268 |: Ceferino - Save the cows!
1269 </p>
1271 |: Fish Fillets - Puzzle game about witty fish saving the world sokoban-style
1272 </p>
1274 |: XScavenger - X11 clone of Lode Runner
1275 </p>
1277 |: Educational suite GCompris - Educational game for ages 2 to 10
1278 </p>
1280 |: Tatan - HIZ's Tatan
1281 </p>
1283 |: Mines - Clear hidden mines from a minefield
1284 </p>
1286 |: Xmille
1287 </p>
1289 |: Ri-li - a toy simulator game
1290 </p>
1292 |: SLUDGE Engine - Play SLUDGE games
1293 </p>
1295 |: Beneath A Steel Sky - A science-fiction adventure game set in a bleak post-apocalyptic vision of the future
1296 </p>
1298 |: SuperTux - A Super Mario inspired penguin platform game
1299 </p>
1301 |: Cytadela - old-school first person shooter
1302 </p>
1304 |: Iagno - Dominate the board in a classic version of Reversi
1305 </p>
1306 <hr>
1307 <h3>
1308 <a name="GRAPHICS"></a><a href="#STANDARD-MENU">Graphics</a>
1309 </h3>
1311 a: digiKam
1312 </p>
1314 b: Okular
1315 </p>
1317 c: Okular
1318 </p>
1320 d: Photo Layouts Editor
1321 </p>
1323 e: Kamoso - Take any picture with your web cam
1324 </p>
1326 f: ExpoBlending - A tool to blend bracketed images
1327 </p>
1329 g: KColorChooser
1330 </p>
1332 h: AcquireImages - A tool to acquire images using a flat scanner
1333 </p>
1335 i: Okular
1336 </p>
1338 j: Okular
1339 </p>
1341 k: Okular
1342 </p>
1344 l: Gwenview - A simple image viewer
1345 </p>
1347 m: Okular
1348 </p>
1350 n: Okular
1351 </p>
1353 o: Okular
1354 </p>
1356 p: Okular
1357 </p>
1359 q: KolourPaint
1360 </p>
1362 r: Okular
1363 </p>
1365 s: Okular
1366 </p>
1368 t: DNGConverter - A tool to batch convert RAW camera images to DNG
1369 </p>
1371 u: Okular
1372 </p>
1374 v: KSnapshot
1375 </p>
1377 w: Panorama - A tool to assemble images as a panorama
1378 </p>
1380 x: KRuler
1381 </p>
1383 y: KIPI Plugins - KDE Image Plugins Interface
1384 </p>
1386 z: K-3D - Free-as-in-freedom 3D modeling and animation software
1387 </p>
1389 0: Hugin Calibrate Lens - Stitch photographs together
1390 </p>
1392 1: Inkscape - Create and edit Scalable Vector Graphics images
1393 </p>
1395 2: MyPaint - Painting program for digital artists
1396 </p>
1398 3: XSane Image scanning program - A program to work with scanner. Can be used as a scanning, copier, OCR, fax tools.
1399 </p>
1401 4: Document Viewer - View multi-page documents
1402 </p>
1404 5: Camorama Webcam Viewer - View, alter and save images from a webcam
1405 </p>
1407 6: Hugin Panorama Creator - Stitch photographs together
1408 </p>
1410 7: Mandelbulber - Visit 3D Fractal World
1411 </p>
1413 8: LibreOffice Draw
1414 </p>
1416 9: Shotwell - Organize your photos
1417 </p>
1419 A: Stopmotion - Program to create stop-motion animations
1420 </p>
1422 B: ImageMagick (display) - Display and edit image files
1423 </p>
1425 C: PDF Editor - PDF Editor
1426 </p>
1428 D: Scribus - Page Layout and Publication
1429 </p>
1431 E: Xaos - Fractal Zoomer - Fractal Generator
1432 </p>
1434 F: Image Viewer
1435 </p>
1437 G: GNU Image Manipulation Program - Create images and edit photographs
1438 </p>
1440 H: apvlv - Alf's PDF Viewer Like Vim
1441 </p>
1443 I: Hugin Batch Processor - Hugin project stitching queue manager
1444 </p>
1446 J: Shotwell Viewer
1447 </p>
1449 K: Image Viewer
1450 </p>
1452 L: MuPDF - PDF file viewer
1453 </p>
1455 M: gv - View PS and/or PDF files
1456 </p>
1458 N: xpdf - View PDF files
1459 </p>
1461 O: Simple Scan - Scan Documents
1462 </p>
1463 <hr>
1464 <h3>
1465 <a name="NETWORK"></a><a href="#STANDARD-MENU">Network</a>
1466 </h3>
1468 a: Konqueror
1469 </p>
1471 b: KNode
1472 </p>
1474 c: Akregator - A Feed Reader for KDE
1475 </p>
1477 d: KPPPLogview
1478 </p>
1480 e: KNetAttach
1481 </p>
1483 f: Kopete - Instant Messenger
1484 </p>
1486 g: Blogilo
1487 </p>
1489 h: KMail
1490 </p>
1492 i: KRDC
1493 </p>
1495 j: KPPP
1496 </p>
1498 k: Krfb
1499 </p>
1501 l: KGet
1502 </p>
1504 m: Bookmark Editor - Bookmark Organizer and Editor
1505 </p>
1507 n: QWebContentEdit - Edit website contents
1508 </p>
1510 o: Web Browser
1511 </p>
1513 p: Web - Browse the web
1514 </p>
1516 q: SSL/SSH VNC Viewer - SSVNC - access remote VNC desktops
1517 </p>
1519 r: Midori - Lightweight web browser
1520 </p>
1522 s: Remote Desktop Viewer - Access remote desktops
1523 </p>
1525 t: Mail Reader
1526 </p>
1528 u: QBoobmsg - Send and receive messages from various websites
1529 </p>
1531 v: Iceweasel - Browse the World Wide Web
1532 </p>
1534 w: Mumble - A low-latency, high quality voice chat program for gaming
1535 </p>
1537 x: Email Settings - Configure email accounts
1538 </p>
1540 y: IcedTea Java Web Start - IcedTea Java Web Start
1541 </p>
1543 z: Desktop Sharing - Choose how other users can remotely view your desktop
1544 </p>
1546 0: Midori Private Browsing - Open a new private browsing window
1547 </p>
1549 1: Icedove Mail/News - Read/Write Mail/News with Icedove
1550 </p>
1552 2: Web - Browse the web
1553 </p>
1555 3: Liferea - Download and view feeds
1556 </p>
1558 4: Conkeror Web Browser - Browse the World Wide Web
1559 </p>
1561 5: Wireshark - Network traffic analyzer
1562 </p>
1564 6: Ekiga Softphone - Talk to people over the Internet
1565 </p>
1567 7: Google Gadgets (Qt) - Run Google Gadgets in KDE/Qt environment
1568 </p>
1570 8: MLDonkey - Graphical frontend for MLDonkey
1571 </p>
1573 9: Remmina - Connect to remote desktops
1574 </p>
1576 A: QFlatBoob - Search housings
1577 </p>
1579 B: Transmission - Download and share files over BitTorrent
1580 </p>
1582 C: Web Browser
1583 </p>
1585 D: QHaveDate - Optimize your probabilities to have sex on dating websites
1586 </p>
1588 E: X11VNC Server - Share this desktop by VNC
1589 </p>
1591 F: mutt - Simple text-based Mail User Agent
1592 </p>
1594 G: Links 2
1595 </p>
1597 H: Wicd Network Manager
1598 </p>
1600 I: Dillo - Lightweight browser
1601 </p>
1603 J: Gnubiff - Gnubiff is a mail notification program.
1604 </p>
1605 <hr>
1606 <h3>
1607 <a name="OFFICE"></a><a href="#STANDARD-MENU">Office</a>
1608 </h3>
1610 a: Lokalize
1611 </p>
1613 b: KOrganizer - Calendar and Scheduling Program
1614 </p>
1616 c: Kontact
1617 </p>
1619 d: Kontact Administration
1620 </p>
1622 e: KAddressBook
1623 </p>
1625 f: Okular
1626 </p>
1628 g: KTimeTracker
1629 </p>
1631 h: LibreOffice Calc
1632 </p>
1634 i: LibreOffice
1635 </p>
1637 j: Evolution - Manage your email, contacts and schedule
1638 </p>
1640 k: Document Viewer - View multi-page documents
1641 </p>
1643 l: Dictionary - Check word definitions and spellings in an online dictionary
1644 </p>
1646 m: Orage Calendar - Desktop calendar
1647 </p>
1649 n: LibreOffice Draw
1650 </p>
1652 o: Orage Globaltime - Show clocks from different countries
1653 </p>
1655 p: LibreOffice Writer
1656 </p>
1658 q: LibreOffice Base
1659 </p>
1661 r: LyX Document Processor - High level LaTeX frontend
1662 </p>
1664 s: FreeMind
1665 </p>
1667 t: LibreOffice Impress
1668 </p>
1670 u: ePDFViewer - Lightweight PDF document viewer
1671 </p>
1673 v: AbiWord
1674 </p>
1676 w: LibreOffice Math
1677 </p>
1679 x: mutt - Simple text-based Mail User Agent
1680 </p>
1682 y: Gnumeric - Calculation, Analysis, and Visualization of Information
1683 </p>
1685 z: Zathura - A minimalistic document viewer
1686 </p>
1687 <hr>
1688 <h3>
1689 <a name="SETTINGS"></a><a href="#STANDARD-MENU">Settings</a>
1690 </h3>
1692 a: KDE System Settings
1693 </p>
1695 b: Change Password
1696 </p>
1698 c: System Settings
1699 </p>
1701 d: Menu Editor
1702 </p>
1704 e: Date and Time - Date and Time preferences panel
1705 </p>
1707 f: Background - Change the background
1708 </p>
1710 g: Printing - Configure printers
1711 </p>
1713 h: Mouse - Configure pointer device behavior and appearance
1714 </p>
1716 i: Power - Power management settings
1717 </p>
1719 j: Workspaces - Set number and names of workspaces
1720 </p>
1722 k: Network Tools - View information about your network
1723 </p>
1725 l: Users and Groups - Add or remove users and groups
1726 </p>
1728 m: Window Manager - Configure window behavior and shortcuts
1729 </p>
1731 n: Notifications - Customize how notifications appear on your screen
1732 </p>
1734 o: Software Center - Lets you choose from thousands of applications available for your system
1735 </p>
1737 p: Network - Configure network devices and connections
1738 </p>
1740 q: Network - Configure network devices and connections
1741 </p>
1743 r: Details - System Information
1744 </p>
1746 s: User Accounts - Add or remove users
1747 </p>
1749 t: Brightness and Lock - Screen brightness and lock settings
1750 </p>
1752 u: Keyboard - Edit keyboard settings and application shortcuts
1753 </p>
1755 v: Shared Folders - Configure which folders are available for your network neighborhood
1756 </p>
1758 w: Preferred Applications
1759 </p>
1761 x: Region and Language - Change your region and language settings
1762 </p>
1764 y: Bluetooth - Configure Bluetooth settings
1765 </p>
1767 z: Color - Color management settings
1768 </p>
1770 0: Startup Applications - Choose what applications to start when you log in
1771 </p>
1773 1: Screensaver - Change screensaver properties
1774 </p>
1776 2: Update Manager - Show and install available updates
1777 </p>
1779 3: Email Settings - Configure email accounts
1780 </p>
1782 4: Desktop Sharing - Choose how other users can remotely view your desktop
1783 </p>
1785 5: Services - Configure which services will be run when the system starts
1786 </p>
1788 6: Universal Access - Universal Access Preferences
1789 </p>
1791 7: GParted - Create, reorganize, and delete partitions
1792 </p>
1794 8: Wacom Graphics Tablet - Set your Wacom tablet preferences
1795 </p>
1797 9: Displays - Change resolution and position of monitors and projectors
1798 </p>
1800 A: Personal File Sharing - Preferences for sharing of files
1801 </p>
1803 B: Appearance - Customize the look of your desktop
1804 </p>
1806 C: Online Accounts - Manage online accounts
1807 </p>
1809 D: Time and Date - Change system time, date, and timezone
1810 </p>
1812 E: Desktop - Set desktop background and menu and icon behaviour
1813 </p>
1815 F: Keyboard and Mouse - Configure keyboard, mouse, and other input devices
1816 </p>
1818 G: Multimedia Systems Selector - Configure defaults for GStreamer applications
1819 </p>
1821 H: File Manager - Configure the Thunar file manager
1822 </p>
1824 I: Session and Startup - Customize desktop startup and splash screen
1825 </p>
1827 J: Openbox Configuration Manager - Configure and personalize the Openbox window manager
1828 </p>
1830 K: Keyboard - Edit keyboard settings and application shortcuts
1831 </p>
1833 L: ARandR
1834 </p>
1836 M: Settings Editor - Graphical settings editor for Xfconf
1837 </p>
1839 N: Software Sources - Configure the sources for installable software and updates
1840 </p>
1842 O: GCompris Administration - Administration for gcompris
1843 </p>
1845 P: Monitor Settings - Change screen resolution and configure external monitors
1846 </p>
1848 Q: Synaptic Package Manager - Install, remove and upgrade software packages
1849 </p>
1851 R: Orage preferences - Settings for the Xfce 4 Calendar Application (Orage)
1852 </p>
1854 S: Window Manager Tweaks - Fine-tune window behaviour and effects
1855 </p>
1857 T: Network Connections - Manage and change your network connection settings
1858 </p>
1860 U: Preferred Applications
1861 </p>
1863 V: Sound - Change sound volume and sound events
1864 </p>
1866 W: Guake Preferences - Comment
1867 </p>
1869 X: System Settings
1870 </p>
1872 Y: IcedTea Web Control Panel - Configure IcedTea Web (javaws and plugin)
1873 </p>
1875 Z: Settings Manager - Graphical Settings Manager for Xfce 4
1876 </p>
1878 |: Panel tint2 - Customize the panel settings
1879 </p>
1881 |: Tux Paint Config. - Configure Tux Paint
1882 </p>
1884 |: Passwords and Keys - Manage your passwords and encryption keys
1885 </p>
1887 |: Software Settings - Change software update preferences and enable or disable software sources
1888 </p>
1890 |: Main Menu - Add or remove applications from the main menu
1891 </p>
1893 |: Printers - Change printer settings
1894 </p>
1896 |: Desktop Session Settings - Manage applications loaded in desktop session
1897 </p>
1899 |: OpenJDK Java 6 Policy Tool - OpenJDK Java 6 Policy Tool
1900 </p>
1902 |: Accessibility - Improve keyboard and mouse accessibility
1903 </p>
1905 |: Mouse and Touchpad - Set your mouse and touchpad preferences
1906 </p>
1908 |: Customize Look and Feel - Customizes look and feel of your desktop and applications
1909 </p>
1911 |: Pointing devices - Set your mouse and touchpad preferences
1912 </p>
1914 |: Panel
1915 </p>
1917 |: Power Manager - Settings for the Xfce Power Manager
1918 </p>
1920 |: Removable Drives and Media - Configure management of removable drives and media
1921 </p>
1923 |: Display - Configure screen settings and layout
1924 </p>
1925 <hr>
1926 <h3>
1927 <a name="SYSTEM"></a><a href="#STANDARD-MENU">System</a>
1928 </h3>
1930 a: KDiskFree
1931 </p>
1933 b: Konqueror
1934 </p>
1936 c: Nepomuk File Indexing Controller - System tray icon to control the behaviour of the Nepomuk file indexer
1937 </p>
1939 d: Nepomuk Backup
1940 </p>
1942 e: Konqueror
1943 </p>
1945 f: Konqueror
1946 </p>
1948 g: Konsole
1949 </p>
1951 h: System Monitor - View current processes and monitor system state
1952 </p>
1954 i: Dolphin
1955 </p>
1957 j: KwikDisk
1958 </p>
1960 k: Konqueror
1961 </p>
1963 l: KSystemLog
1964 </p>
1966 m: File Manager - Super User Mode
1967 </p>
1969 n: KWalletManager
1970 </p>
1972 o: Krusader - root-mode
1973 </p>
1975 p: Krfb
1976 </p>
1978 q: KUser
1979 </p>
1981 r: KInfoCenter
1982 </p>
1984 s: KRandRTray - A panel applet for resizing and reorientating X screens.
1985 </p>
1987 t: Software Install - Install selected software on the system
1988 </p>
1990 u: Synaptic Package Manager - Install, remove and upgrade software packages
1991 </p>
1993 v: Printing - Configure printers
1994 </p>
1996 w: UXTerm - standard terminal emulator for the X window system
1997 </p>
1999 x: Network Tools - View information about your network
2000 </p>
2002 y: Xosview - X based system monitor
2003 </p>
2005 z: Log File Viewer - View or monitor system log files
2006 </p>
2008 0: Users and Groups - Add or remove users and groups
2009 </p>
2011 1: Configuration Editor - Directly edit your entire configuration database
2012 </p>
2014 2: Software Log Viewer - View past package management tasks
2015 </p>
2017 3: Software Center - Lets you choose from thousands of applications available for your system
2018 </p>
2020 4: Wine Uninstaller - Uninstall Windows programs
2021 </p>
2023 5: Network - Configure network devices and connections
2024 </p>
2026 6: Bulk Rename - Rename Multiple Files
2027 </p>
2029 7: User Accounts - Add or remove users
2030 </p>
2032 8: CD/DVD Creator - Create CDs and DVDs
2033 </p>
2035 9: Shared Folders - Configure which folders are available for your network neighborhood
2036 </p>
2038 A: Power Statistics - Observe power management
2039 </p>
2041 B: Wine configuration - Setup the compatibility layer for Windows programs
2042 </p>
2044 C: Update Manager - Show and install available updates
2045 </p>
2047 D: Software Install - Install selected software on the system
2048 </p>
2050 E: Services - Configure which services will be run when the system starts
2051 </p>
2053 F: Disk Usage Analyzer - Check folder sizes and available disk space
2054 </p>
2056 G: GParted - Create, reorganize, and delete partitions
2057 </p>
2059 H: Panel
2060 </p>
2062 I: Time and Date - Change system time, date, and timezone
2063 </p>
2065 J: Task Manager - Manage running processes
2066 </p>
2068 K: System Monitor - View current processes and monitor system state
2069 </p>
2071 L: Open Folder with Thunar - Open the specified folders in Thunar
2072 </p>
2074 M: Catalog Installer - Install a catalog of software on the system
2075 </p>
2077 N: Log Out
2078 </p>
2080 O: XTerm - standard terminal emulator for the X window system
2081 </p>
2083 P: Reportbug - Report bugs to the Debian BTS
2084 </p>
2086 Q: GDebi Package Installer - Install and view software packages
2087 </p>
2089 R: Terminal emulator - Terminal Emulator
2090 </p>
2092 S: Xfe - A lightweight file manager for X Window
2093 </p>
2095 T: Thunar File Manager - Browse the filesystem with the file manager
2096 </p>
2098 U: Synaptic Package Manager - Install, remove and upgrade software packages
2099 </p>
2101 V: Software Update - Update software installed on the system
2102 </p>
2104 W: dconf Editor - Directly edit your entire configuration database
2105 </p>
2107 X: Htop - Show System Processes
2108 </p>
2110 Y: UNetbootin - Tool for creating Live USB drives
2111 </p>
2113 Z: Add/Remove Software - Add or remove software installed on the system
2114 </p>
2116 |: Service Pack Creator - Create service packs for sharing with other computers
2117 </p>
2118 <hr>
2119 <h3>
2120 <a name="UTILITY"></a><a href="#STANDARD-MENU">Utility</a>
2121 </h3>
2123 a: KJots
2124 </p>
2126 b: KTimer
2127 </p>
2129 c: Okteta
2130 </p>
2132 d: Krusader
2133 </p>
2135 e: Ark
2136 </p>
2138 f: Snippets datafile editor
2139 </p>
2141 g: KNotes
2142 </p>
2144 h: Akonaditray
2145 </p>
2147 i: KonsoleKalendar
2148 </p>
2150 j: Home
2151 </p>
2153 k: KDE Groupware Wizard
2154 </p>
2156 l: Help
2157 </p>
2159 m: Kate
2160 </p>
2162 n: Klipper
2163 </p>
2165 o: Kleopatra
2166 </p>
2168 p: KMouth
2169 </p>
2171 q: Kleopatra
2172 </p>
2174 r: SuperKaramba - An engine for cool desktop eyecandy.
2175 </p>
2177 s: KGpg - A GnuPG frontend
2178 </p>
2180 t: KAlarm
2181 </p>
2183 u: KFileReplace
2184 </p>
2186 v: KWrite
2187 </p>
2189 w: KTeaTime
2190 </p>
2192 x: KFontView
2193 </p>
2195 y: KCalc
2196 </p>
2198 z: Jovie - KDE Text To Speech Service
2199 </p>
2201 0: Sweeper
2202 </p>
2204 1: KMag
2205 </p>
2207 2: KTimeTracker
2208 </p>
2210 3: KMouseTool - Clicks the mouse for you, reducing the effects of RSI
2211 </p>
2213 4: Find Files/Folders
2214 </p>
2216 5: Filelight - View disk usage information
2217 </p>
2219 6: KCharSelect
2220 </p>
2222 7: Shutter - Capture, edit and share screenshots
2223 </p>
2225 8: Time Tracker - Project Hamster - track your time
2226 </p>
2228 9: Run Program...
2229 </p>
2231 A: Guake Terminal - Use the command line in a Quake-like terminal
2232 </p>
2234 B: Help
2235 </p>
2237 C: Xfimage - A simple image viewer for Xfe
2238 </p>
2240 D: Add New Program - Adds Zero Install programs to your Applications menu
2241 </p>
2243 E: Xournal - Take handwritten notes
2244 </p>
2246 F: Leafpad - Simple text editor
2247 </p>
2249 G: Terminal - Use the command line
2250 </p>
2252 H: File Manager - Configure the Thunar file manager
2253 </p>
2255 I: Calculator - Perform arithmetic, scientific or financial calculations
2256 </p>
2258 J: Kupfer - Convenient command and access tool for applications and documents
2259 </p>
2261 K: Xfview - A simple text viewer for Xfe
2262 </p>
2264 L: Galculator - Perform simple and scientific calculations
2265 </p>
2267 M: Character Map - Insert special characters into documents
2268 </p>
2270 N: Time Tracker - Project Hamster - track your time
2271 </p>
2273 O: Bulk Rename - Rename Multiple Files
2274 </p>
2276 P: Search for Files... - Locate documents and folders on this computer by name or content
2277 </p>
2279 Q: Live Magic - Create Debian Live systems (LiveCDs, etc.)
2280 </p>
2282 R: Xfpack - A simple package manager for Xfe
2283 </p>
2285 S: Manage Programs - Update or Remove Zero Install programs on your Applications menu
2286 </p>
2288 T: Tux Commander - A two panel file manager
2289 </p>
2291 U: About Xfce
2292 </p>
2294 V: gedit - Edit text files
2295 </p>
2297 W: Curtain - Show and move a curtain on the desktop
2298 </p>
2300 X: Orage Globaltime - Show clocks from different countries
2301 </p>
2303 Y: Screenshot - Save images of your desktop or individual windows
2304 </p>
2306 Z: Bluetooth Device Setup - Setup Bluetooth devices
2307 </p>
2309 |: VirtualBox - Run several virtual systems on a single host computer
2310 </p>
2312 |: Help
2313 </p>
2315 |: GNOME Commander - A two paned file manager
2316 </p>
2318 |: Time Tracking Overview - The overview window of hamster time tracker
2319 </p>
2321 |: GNOME Shell Extension Preferences - Configure GNOME Shell Extensions
2322 </p>
2324 |: Spotlighter - Show and move a spotlight on the desktop
2325 </p>
2327 |: File Manager - Configure the Thunar file manager
2328 </p>
2330 |: Xarchiver - A GTK+2 only archive manager
2331 </p>
2333 |: Take Vector Screenshot - Save vector images of application windows
2334 </p>
2336 |: Battery Charge Graph - Battery Charge Graph
2337 </p>
2339 |: Application Finder - Find and launch applications installed on your system
2340 </p>
2342 |: Open Folder with Thunar - Open the specified folders in Thunar
2343 </p>
2345 |: Worker - File manager for X.
2346 </p>
2348 |: Archive Manager - Create and modify an archive
2349 </p>
2351 |: Weboob backends configuration - Configure Weboob backends
2352 </p>
2354 |: GNOME Shell - Window management and application launching
2355 </p>
2357 |: Files - Access and organize files
2358 </p>
2360 |: LXTerminal - Use the command line
2361 </p>
2363 |: On-Screen Keyboard - Navigate applications and type using alternative input devices
2364 </p>
2366 |: Terminal emulator - Terminal Emulator
2367 </p>
2369 |: GNU Emacs 23 - View and edit files
2370 </p>
2372 |: Thunar File Manager - Browse the filesystem with the file manager
2373 </p>
2375 |: Xfwrite - A simple text editor for Xfe
2376 </p>
2378 |: Gentoo - Fully GUI-configurable, two-pane X file manager
2379 </p>
2381 |: Disk Utility - Manage Drives and Media
2382 </p>
2384 |: Terminal Emulator
2385 </p>
2387 |: Root Terminal - Opens a terminal as the root user, using gksu to ask for the password
2388 </p>
2390 |: Bluetooth Transfer - Send files via Bluetooth
2391 </p>
2393 |: Main Menu - Add or remove applications from the main menu
2394 </p>
2396 |: Image Viewer
2397 </p>
2399 |: Contacts
2400 </p>
2401 <hr>
2402 <h3>
2403 <a name="TERMINALEMULATOR"></a><a href="#STANDARD-MENU">Terminalemulator</a>
2404 </h3>
2406 a: Konsole
2407 </p>
2409 b: Guake Terminal - Use the command line in a Quake-like terminal
2410 </p>
2412 c: UXTerm - standard terminal emulator for the X window system
2413 </p>
2415 d: Terminal - Use the command line
2416 </p>
2418 e: XTerm - standard terminal emulator for the X window system
2419 </p>
2421 f: LXTerminal - Use the command line
2422 </p>
2424 g: Terminal emulator - Terminal Emulator
2425 </p>
2427 h: Root Terminal - Opens a terminal as the root user, using gksu to ask for the password
2428 </p>
2429 <hr>
2430 <h3>
2431 <a name="SCREENSAVER"></a><a href="#STANDARD-MENU">Screensaver</a>
2432 </h3>
2434 a: LCDscrub - This screen saver is not meant to look pretty, but rather, to repair burn-in on LCD monitors. Believe it or not, screen burn is not a thing of the past. It can happen to LCD screens pretty easily, even in this modern age. However, leaving the screen on and displaying high contrast images can often repair the damage. That's what this screen saver does. See also: http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum
2435 </p>
2437 b: Kumppa - Spiraling, spinning, and very, very fast splashes of color rush toward the screen. Written by Teemu Suutari.
2438 </p>
2440 c: CloudLife - Generates cloud-like formations based on a variant of Conway's Life. The difference is that cells have a maximum age, after which they count as 3 for populating the next generation. This makes long-lived formations explode instead of just sitting there. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conway%27s_Game_of_Life Written by Don Marti.
2441 </p>
2443 d: m6502 - This emulates a 6502 microprocessor. The family of 6502 chips were used throughout the 70's and 80's in machines such as the Atari 2600, Commodore PET, VIC20 and C64, Apple ][, and the NES. Some example programs are included, and it can also read in an assembly file as input. Original JavaScript Version by Stian Soreng: http://www.6502asm.com/. Ported to XScreenSaver by Jeremy English. Written by Stian Soreng and Jeremy English.
2444 </p>
2446 e: Galaxy - This draws spinning galaxies, which then collide and scatter their stars to the, uh, four winds or something. Written by Uli Siegmund, Harald Backert, and Hubert Feyrer.
2447 </p>
2449 f: IFS - This one draws spinning, colliding iterated-function-system images. Note that the "Detail" parameter is exponential. Number of points drawn is functions^detail. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iterated_function_system Written by Chris Le Sueur and Robby Griffin.
2450 </p>
2452 g: Swirl - Flowing, swirly patterns. Written by M. Dobie and R. Taylor.
2453 </p>
2455 h: StonerView - Chains of colorful squares dance around each other in complex spiral patterns. Inspired by David Tristram's `electropaint' screen saver, originally written for SGI computers in the late 1980s or early 1990s. Written by Andrew Plotkin.
2456 </p>
2458 i: Slip - This throws some random bits on the screen, then sucks them through a jet engine and spews them out the other side. To avoid turning the image completely to mush, every now and then it will it interject some splashes of color into the scene, or go into a spin cycle, or stretch the image like taffy. Written by Scott Draves and Jamie Zawinski.
2459 </p>
2461 j: GFlux - Draws a rippling waves on a rotating wireframe grid. Written by Josiah Pease.
2462 </p>
2464 k: Munch - DATAI 2 ADDB 1,2 ROTC 2,-22 XOR 1,2 JRST .-4 As reported by HAKMEM, in 1962, Jackson Wright wrote the above PDP-1 code. That code still lives on here, some 46 years later. The number of lines of enclosing code has increased substantially, however. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HAKMEM http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Munching_square Written by Jackson Wright and Tim Showalter.
2465 </p>
2467 l: Apple2 - Simulates an original Apple ][ Plus computer in all its 1979 glory. It also reproduces the appearance of display on a color television set of the period. In "Basic Programming Mode", a simulated user types in a BASIC program and runs it. In "Text Mode", it displays the output of a program, or the contents of a file or URL. In "Slideshow Mode", it chooses random images and displays them within the limitations of the Apple ][ display hardware. (Six available colors in hi-res mode!) On X11 systems, This program is also a fully-functional VT100 emulator. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apple_II_series Written by Trevor Blackwell.
2468 </p>
2470 m: Hypertorus - This shows a rotating Clifford Torus: a torus lying on the "surface" of a 4D hypersphere. Inspired by Thomas Banchoff's book "Beyond the Third Dimension: Geometry, Computer Graphics, and Higher Dimensions", Scientific American Library, 1990. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/N-sphere http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clifford_torus http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regular_polytope Written by Carsten Steger.
2471 </p>
2473 n: Jigsaw - This grabs a screen image, carves it up into a jigsaw puzzle, shuffles it, and then solves the puzzle. This works especially well when you feed it an external video signal instead of letting it grab the screen image (actually, I guess this is generally true...) When it is grabbing a video image, it is sometimes pretty hard to guess what the image is going to look like once the puzzle is solved. Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2474 </p>
2476 o: Rorschach - This generates random inkblot patterns via a reflected random walk. Any deep-seated neurotic tendencies which this program reveals are your own problem. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rorschach_inkblot_test http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Random_walk Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2477 </p>
2479 p: GLHanoi - Solves the Towers of Hanoi puzzle. Move N disks from one pole to another, one disk at a time, with no disk ever resting on a disk smaller than itself. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tower_of_Hanoi Written by Dave Atkinson; 2005.
2480 </p>
2482 q: Circuit - Animates a number of 3D electronic components. Written by Ben Buxton.
2483 </p>
2485 r: Starfish - This generates a sequence of undulating, throbbing, star-like patterns which pulsate, rotate, and turn inside out. Another display mode uses these shapes to lay down a field of colors, which are then cycled. The motion is very organic. Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2486 </p>
2488 s: Julia - Animates the Julia set (a close relative of the Mandelbrot set). The small moving dot indicates the control point from which the rest of the image was generated. See also the "Discrete" screen saver. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julia_set Written by Sean McCullough.
2489 </p>
2491 t: Maze - This generates random mazes (with various different algorithms), and then solves them. Backtracking and look-ahead paths are displayed in different colors. Written by Jim Randell and many others.
2492 </p>
2494 u: VidWhacker - This is a shell script that grabs a frame of video from the system's video input, and then uses some PBM filters (chosen at random) to manipulate and recombine the video frame in various ways (edge detection, subtracting the image from a rotated version of itself, etc.) Then it displays that image for a few seconds, and does it again. This works really well if you just feed broadcast television into it. Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2495 </p>
2497 v: Pipes - A growing plumbing system, with bolts and valves. Written by Marcelo Vianna.
2498 </p>
2500 w: SBalls - Draws an animation of textured balls spinning like crazy. Written by Eric Lassauge.
2501 </p>
2503 x: MirrorBlob - Draws a wobbly blob that distorts the image behind it. Written by Jon Dowdall.
2504 </p>
2506 y: Polyominoes - Repeatedly attempts to completely fill a rectangle with irregularly-shaped puzzle pieces. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polyomino Written by Stephen Montgomery-Smith.
2507 </p>
2509 z: Flame - Iterative fractals. Written by Scott Draves.
2510 </p>
2512 0: AntSpotlight - Draws an ant (with a headlight) who walks on top of an image of your desktop or other image. Written by Blair Tennessy.
2513 </p>
2515 1: XLyap - This generates pretty fractal pictures via the Lyapunov exponent. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lyapunov_exponent Written by Ron Record.
2516 </p>
2518 2: FontGlide - Puts text on the screen using large characters that glide in from the edges, assemble, then disperse. Alternately, it can simply scroll whole sentences from right to left. Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2519 </p>
2521 3: Spotlight - Draws a spotlight scanning across a black screen, illuminating the underlying desktop (or a picture) when it passes. Written by Rick Schultz and Jamie Zawinski.
2522 </p>
2524 4: SkyTentacles - There is a tentacled abomination in the sky. From above you it devours. Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2525 </p>
2527 5: Surfaces - This draws a visualization of several interesting parametric surfaces. http://mathworld.wolfram.com/DinisSurface.html http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enneper_surface http://mathworld.wolfram.com/EnnepersMinimalSurface.html http://mathworld.wolfram.com/KuenSurface.html http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moebius_strip http://mathworld.wolfram.com/Seashell.html http://mathworld.wolfram.com/SwallowtailCatastrophe.html http://mathworld.wolfram.com/BohemianDome.html http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whitney_umbrella http://mathworld.wolfram.com/PlueckersConoid.html http://mathworld.wolfram.com/HennebergsMinimalSurface.html http://mathworld.wolfram.com/CatalansSurface.html http://mathworld.wolfram.com/CorkscrewSurface.html Written by Andrey Mirtchovski and Carsten Steger.
2528 </p>
2530 6: GLPlanet - Draws a planet bouncing around in space. The built-in image is a map of the earth (extracted from `xearth'), but you can wrap any texture around the sphere, e.g., the planetary textures that come with `ssystem'. Written by David Konerding.
2531 </p>
2533 7: Intermomentary - A surface is filled with a hundred medium to small sized circles. Each circle has a different size and direction, but moves at the same slow rate. Displays the instantaneous intersections of the circles as well as the aggregate intersections of the circles. The circles begin with a radius of 1 pixel and slowly increase to some arbitrary size. Circles are drawn with small moving points along the perimeter. The intersections are rendered as glowing orbs. Glowing orbs are rendered only when a perimeter point moves past the intersection point. Written by Casey Reas, William Ngan, Robert Hodgin, and Jamie Zawinski.
2534 </p>
2536 8: Cynosure - Random dropshadowed rectangles pop onto the screen in lockstep. Written by Ozymandias G. Desiderata, Jamie Zawinski, and Stephen Linhart.
2537 </p>
2539 9: WhirlWindWarp - Floating stars are acted upon by a mixture of simple 2D forcefields. The strength of each forcefield changes continuously, and it is also switched on and off at random. Written by Paul 'Joey' Clark.
2540 </p>
2542 A: SpeedMine - Simulates speeding down a rocky mineshaft, or a funky dancing worm. Written by Conrad Parker.
2543 </p>
2545 B: Flow - Strange attractors formed of flows in a 3D differential equation phase space. Features the popular attractors described by Lorentz, Roessler, Birkhoff and Duffing, and can discover entirely new attractors by itself. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Attractor#Strange_attractor Written by Tim Auckland.
2546 </p>
2548 C: Bouboule - This draws what looks like a spinning, deforming balloon with varying-sized spots painted on its invisible surface. Written by Jeremie Petit.
2549 </p>
2551 D: Barcode - Draws a random sequence of colorful barcodes scrolling across your screen. CONSUME! The barcodes follow the UPC-A, UPC-E, EAN-8 or EAN-13 standards. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universal_Product_Code http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_Article_Number Written by Dan Bornstein.
2552 </p>
2554 E: Moire2 - Generates fields of concentric circles or ovals, and combines the planes with various operations. The planes are moving independently of one another, causing the interference lines to spray. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moire_pattern Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2555 </p>
2557 F: BouncingCow - A Cow. A Trampoline. Together, they fight crime. Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2558 </p>
2560 G: Grav - This draws a simple orbital simulation. With trails enabled, it looks kind of like a cloud-chamber photograph. Written by Greg Bowering.
2561 </p>
2563 H: Greynetic - Draws random colored, stippled and transparent rectangles. Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2564 </p>
2566 I: Atunnel - Draws an animation of a textured tunnel in GL. Written by Eric Lassauge and Roman Podobedov.
2567 </p>
2569 J: Sproingies - Slinky-like creatures walk down an infinite staircase and occasionally explode! http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slinky http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Q%2Abert http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marble_Madness Written by Ed Mackey.
2570 </p>
2572 K: Hilbert - This draws the recursive Hilbert space-filling curve, in both 2D and 3D variants. It incrementally animates the growth and recursion to the maximum depth, then unwinds it back. The Hilbert path is a single contiguous line that can fill a volume without crossing itself. As a data structure, Hilbert paths are useful because ordering along the curve preserves locality: points that close together along the curve are also close together in space. The converse is often, but not always, true. The coloration reflects this. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hilbert_curve Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2573 </p>
2575 L: Mountain - Generates random 3D plots that look vaguely mountainous. Written by Pascal Pensa.
2576 </p>
2578 M: Polytopes - This shows one of the six regular 4D polytopes rotating in 4D. Inspired by H.S.M Coxeter's book "Regular Polytopes", 3rd Edition, Dover Publications, Inc., 1973, and Thomas Banchoff's book "Beyond the Third Dimension: Geometry, Computer Graphics, and Higher Dimensions", Scientific American Library, 1990. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypercube http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regular_polytope Written by Carsten Steger.
2579 </p>
2581 N: Morph3D - Platonic solids that turn inside out and get spikey. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Platonic_solid Written by Marcelo Vianna.
2582 </p>
2584 O: GLMatrix - Draws 3D dropping characters similar to what is seen in the title sequence of "The Matrix". See also "xmatrix" for a 2D rendering of the similar effect that appeared on the computer monitors actually *in* the movie. Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2585 </p>
2587 P: FluidBalls - Models the physics of bouncing balls, or of particles in a gas or fluid, depending on the settings. If "Shake Box" is selected, then every now and then, the box will be rotated, changing which direction is down (in order to keep the settled balls in motion.) Written by Peter Birtles and Jamie Zawinski.
2588 </p>
2590 Q: Qix - Bounces a series of line segments around the screen, and uses variations on this basic motion pattern to produce all sorts of different presentations: line segments, filled polygons, and overlapping translucent areas. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qix Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2591 </p>
2593 R: CubicGrid - Draws the view of an observer located inside a rotating 3D lattice of colored points. Written by Vasek Potocek.
2594 </p>
2596 S: Boing - This bouncing ball is a clone of the first graphics demo for the Amiga 1000, which was written by Dale Luck and RJ Mical during a break at the 1984 Consumer Electronics Show (or so the legend goes.) This looks like the original Amiga demo if you turn off "smoothing" and "lighting" and turn on "scanlines", and is somewhat more modern otherwise. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amiga#Boing_Ball Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2597 </p>
2599 T: GLKnots - Generates some twisting 3d knot patterns. Spins 'em around. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knot_theory Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2600 </p>
2602 U: RubikBlocks - Animates the Rubik's Mirror Blocks puzzle. See also the "Rubik", "Cube21", and "GLSnake" screen savers. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Combination_puzzles#Irregular_Cuboids Written by Vasek Potocek.
2603 </p>
2605 V: BSOD - BSOD stands for "Blue Screen of Death". The finest in personal computer emulation, BSOD simulates popular screen savers from a number of less robust operating systems. Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2606 </p>
2608 W: Celtic - Repeatedly draws random Celtic cross-stitch patterns. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Celtic_knot Written by Max Froumentin.
2609 </p>
2611 X: TimeTunnel - Draws an animation similar to the opening and closing effects on the Dr. Who TV show. Written by Sean P. Brennan.
2612 </p>
2614 Y: Rocks - This draws an animation of flight through an asteroid field, with changes in rotation and direction. Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2615 </p>
2617 Z: Kaleidescope - A simple kaleidoscope. See also "GLeidescope". http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kaleidoscope Written by Ron Tapia.
2618 </p>
2620 |: Deluxe - Draws a pulsing sequence of transparent stars, circles, and lines. Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2621 </p>
2623 |: Pinion - Draws an interconnected set of gears moving across the screen. See also the "Gears" and "MoebiusGears" screen savers. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Involute_gear Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2624 </p>
2626 |: Hopalong - This draws lacy fractal patterns based on iteration in the imaginary plane, from a 1986 Scientific American article. See also the "Discrete" screen saver. Written by Patrick Naughton.
2627 </p>
2629 |: Atlantis - A 3D animation of a number of sharks, dolphins, and whales. Written by Mark Kilgard.
2630 </p>
2632 |: Goop - This draws set of animating, transparent, amoeba-like blobs. The blobs change shape as they wander around the screen, and they are translucent, so you can see the lower blobs through the higher ones, and when one passes over another, their colors merge. I got the idea for this from a mouse pad I had once, which achieved the same kind of effect in real life by having several layers of plastic with colored oil between them. Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2633 </p>
2635 |: Noof - Draws some rotatey patterns, using OpenGL. Written by Bill Torzewski.
2636 </p>
2638 |: Pong - This simulates the 1971 Pong home video game, as well as various artifacts from displaying it on a color TV set. In clock mode, the score keeps track of the current time. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pong Written by Jeremy English and Trevor Blackwell.
2639 </p>
2641 |: Interaggregate - A surface is filled with a hundred medium to small sized circles. Each circle has a different size and direction, but moves at the same slow rate. Displays the instantaneous intersections of the circles as well as the aggregate intersections of the circles. Though actually it doesn't look like circles at all! Written by Casey Reas, William Ngan, Robert Hodgin, and Jamie Zawinski.
2642 </p>
2644 |: Petri - This simulates colonies of mold growing in a petri dish. Growing colored circles overlap and leave spiral interference in their wake. Written by Dan Bornstein.
2645 </p>
2647 |: Fiberlamp - Draws a groovy rotating fiber optic lamp. Written by Tim Auckland.
2648 </p>
2650 |: Pyro - Exploding fireworks. See also the "Fireworkx", "Eruption", and "XFlame" screen savers. Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2651 </p>
2653 |: Wormhole - Flying through a colored wormhole in space. Written by Jon Rafkind.
2654 </p>
2656 |: Spheremonics - These closed objects are commonly called spherical harmonics, although they are only remotely related to the mathematical definition found in the solution to certain wave functions, most notably the eigenfunctions of angular momentum operators. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spherical_harmonics#Visualization_of_the_spherical_harmonics Written by Paul Bourke and Jamie Zawinski.
2657 </p>
2659 |: Substrate - Crystalline lines grow on a computational substrate. A simple perpendicular growth rule creates intricate city-like structures. Written by J. Tarbell and Mike Kershaw.
2660 </p>
2662 |: AntMaze - Draws a few views of a few ants walking around in a simple maze. Written by Blair Tennessy.
2663 </p>
2665 |: Crackberg - Flies through height maps, optionally animating the creation and destruction of generated tiles; tiles `grow' into place. Written by Matus Telgarsky.
2666 </p>
2668 |: DecayScreen - This takes an image and makes it melt. You've no doubt seen this effect before, but no screensaver would really be complete without it. It works best if there's something colorful visible. Warning, if the effect continues after the screen saver is off, seek medical attention. Written by David Wald, Vivek Khera, Jamie Zawinski, and Vince Levey.
2669 </p>
2671 |: Tangram - Solves tangram puzzles. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tangram Written by Jeremy English.
2672 </p>
2674 |: Lavalite - Draws a 3D Simulation a Lava Lite(r). Odd-shaped blobs of a mysterious substance are heated, slowly rise to the top of the bottle, and then drop back down as they cool. This simulation requires a fairly fast machine (both CPU and 3D performance.) "LAVA LITE(r) and the configuration of the LAVA(r) brand motion lamp are registered trademarks of Haggerty Enterprises, Inc. The configuration of the globe and base of the motion lamp are registered trademarks of Haggerty Enterprises, Inc. in the U.S.A. and in other countries around the world." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lava_lamp http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metaballs Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2675 </p>
2677 |: Pulsar - Draws some intersecting planes, making use of alpha blending, fog, textures, and mipmaps. Written by David Konerding.
2678 </p>
2680 |: RotZoomer - Creates a collage of rotated and scaled portions of the screen. Written by Claudio Matsuoka.
2681 </p>
2683 |: Engine - Draws a simple model of an engine that floats around the screen. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internal_combustion_engine#Operation Written by Ben Buxton and Ed Beroset.
2684 </p>
2686 |: Phosphor - Draws a simulation of an old terminal, with large pixels and long-sustain phosphor. On X11 systems, This program is also a fully-functional VT100 emulator! Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2687 </p>
2689 |: Rubik - Draws a Rubik's Cube that rotates in three dimensions and repeatedly shuffles and solves itself. See also the "GLSnake" and "Cube21" screen savers. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rubik%27s_Cube Written by Marcelo Vianna.
2690 </p>
2692 |: Zoom - Zooms in on a part of the screen and then moves around. With the "Lenses" option, the result is like looking through many overlapping lenses rather than just a simple zoom. Written by James Macnicol.
2693 </p>
2695 |: Polyhedra - Displays different 3D solids and some information about each. A new solid is chosen every few seconds. There are 75 uniform polyhedra, plus 5 infinite sets of prisms and antiprisms; including their duals brings the total to 160. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uniform_polyhedra Written by Dr. Zvi Har'El and Jamie Zawinski.
2696 </p>
2698 |: Lockward - A translucent spinning, blinking thing. Sort of a cross between the wards in an old combination lock and those old backlit information displays that animated and changed color via polarized light. Written by Leo L. Schwab.
2699 </p>
2701 |: Stairs - Escher's infinite staircase. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maurits_Cornelis_Escher Written by Marcelo Vianna.
2702 </p>
2704 |: Loop - Generates loop-shaped colonies that spawn, age, and eventually die. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Langton%27s_loops Written by David Bagley.
2705 </p>
2707 |: Bubble3D - Draws a stream of rising, undulating 3D bubbles, rising toward the top of the screen, with transparency and specular reflections. Written by Richard Jones.
2708 </p>
2710 |: CompanionCube - The symptoms most commonly produced by Enrichment Center testing are superstition, perceiving inanimate objects as alive, and hallucinations. The Enrichment Center reminds you that the weighted companion cube will never threaten to stab you and, in fact, cannot speak. In the event that the Weighted Companion Cube does speak, the Enrichment Center urges you to disregard its advice. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portal_%28video_game%29 Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2711 </p>
2713 |: Juggler3D - 3D simulation of a juggler performing with balls, clubs and rings. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siteswap Written by Brian Apps.
2714 </p>
2716 |: Anemone - Wiggling tentacles. Written by Gabriel Finch.
2717 </p>
2719 |: MoebiusGears - Draws a closed, interlinked chain of rotating gears. The layout of the gears follows the path of a moebius strip. See also the "Pinion" and "Gears" screen savers. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Involute_gear http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moebius_strip Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2720 </p>
2722 |: Hypnowheel - Draws a series of overlapping, translucent spiral patterns. The tightness of their spirals fluctuates in and out. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moire_pattern Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2723 </p>
2725 |: Sierpinski - This draws the two-dimensional variant of the recursive Sierpinski triangle fractal. See also the "Sierpinski3D" screen saver. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sierpinski_triangle Written by Desmond Daignault.
2726 </p>
2728 |: Sierpinski3D - This draws the Sierpinski tetrahedron fractal, the three-dimensional variant of the recursive Sierpinski triangle. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sierpinski_triangle#Analogs_in_higher_dimension Written by Tim Robinson and Jamie Zawinski.
2729 </p>
2731 |: GLText - Displays a few lines of text spinning around in a solid 3D font. The text can use strftime() escape codes to display the current date and time. Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2732 </p>
2734 |: Euler2D - Simulates two dimensional incompressible inviscid fluid flow. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euler_equations_%28fluid_dynamics%29 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inviscid_flow Written by Stephen Montgomery-Smith.
2735 </p>
2737 |: Boxed - Draws a box full of 3D bouncing balls that explode. Written by Sander van Grieken.
2738 </p>
2740 |: Superquadrics - Morphing 3D shapes. Written by Ed Mackey.
2741 </p>
2743 |: Fireworkx - Exploding fireworks. See also the "Eruption", "XFlame" and "Pyro" screen savers. Written by Rony B Chandran.
2744 </p>
2746 |: FlipFlop - Draws a grid of 3D colored tiles that change positions with each other. Written by Kevin Ogden and Sergio Gutierrez.
2747 </p>
2749 |: XMatrix - Draws dropping characters similar to what is seen on the computer monitors in "The Matrix". See also "GLMatrix" for a 3D rendering of the similar effect that appeared in the movie's title sequence. Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2750 </p>
2752 |: Distort - Grabs an image of the screen, and then lets a transparent lens wander around the screen, magnifying whatever is underneath. Written by Jonas Munsin.
2753 </p>
2755 |: XJack - This behaves schizophrenically and makes a lot of typos. Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2756 </p>
2758 |: Extrusion - Draws various rotating extruded shapes that twist around, lengthen, and turn inside out. Written by Linas Vepstas, David Konerding, and Jamie Zawinski.
2759 </p>
2761 |: MemScroller - This draws a dump of its own process memory scrolling across the screen in three windows at three different rates. Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2762 </p>
2764 |: FlyingToasters - A fleet of 3d space-age jet-powered flying toasters (and toast!) Inspired by the ancient Berkeley Systems After Dark flying toasters. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/After_Dark_%28software%29#Flying_Toasters Written by Jamie Zawinski and Devon Dossett.
2765 </p>
2767 |: Bumps - A spotlight roams across an embossed version of your desktop or other picture. Written by Shane Smit.
2768 </p>
2770 |: XAnalogTV - XAnalogTV shows a detailed simulation of an old TV set showing various test patterns, with various picture artifacts like snow, bloom, distortion, ghosting, and hash noise. It also simulates the TV warming up. It will cycle through 12 channels, some with images you give it, and some with color bars or nothing but static. Written by Trevor Blackwell.
2771 </p>
2773 |: Penetrate - Simulates (something like) the classic arcade game Missile Command. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Missile_Command Written by Adam Miller.
2774 </p>
2776 |: Apollonian - Draws an Apollonian gasket: a fractal packing of circles with smaller circles, demonstrating Descartes's theorem. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apollonian_gasket http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Descartes%27_theorem Written by Allan R. Wilks and David Bagley.
2777 </p>
2779 |: Endgame - Black slips out of three mating nets, but the fourth one holds him tight! A brilliant composition! See also the "Queens" screen saver. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chess_endgame Written by Blair Tennessy.
2780 </p>
2782 |: Ripples - This draws rippling interference patterns like splashing water. With the -water option, it manipulates your desktop image to look like something is dripping into it. Written by Tom Hammersley.
2783 </p>
2785 |: Menger - This draws the three-dimensional variant of the recursive Menger Gasket, a cube-based fractal object analagous to the Sierpinski Tetrahedron. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Menger_sponge http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sierpinski_carpet Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2786 </p>
2788 |: Cage - This draws Escher's "Impossible Cage", a 3d analog of a moebius strip, and rotates it in three dimensions. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maurits_Cornelis_Escher Written by Marcelo Vianna.
2789 </p>
2791 |: Triangle - Generates random mountain ranges using iterative subdivision of triangles. Written by Tobias Gloth.
2792 </p>
2794 |: Gears - This draws sets of turning, interlocking gears, rotating in three dimensions. See also the "Pinion" and "MoebiusGears" screen savers. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Involute_gear http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epicyclic_gearing Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2795 </p>
2797 |: JigglyPuff - This does bad things with quasi-spherical objects. You have a tetrahedron with tesselated faces. The vertices on these faces have forces on them: one proportional to the distance from the surface of a sphere; and one proportional to the distance from the neighbors. They also have inertia. The resulting effect can range from a shape that does nothing, to a frenetic polygon storm. Somewhere in between there it usually manifests as a blob that jiggles in a kind of disturbing manner. Written by Keith Macleod.
2798 </p>
2800 |: Wander - Draws a colorful random-walk, in various forms. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Random_walk Written by Rick Campbell.
2801 </p>
2803 |: Cube21 - Animates a Rubik-like puzzle known as Cube 21 or Square-1. The rotations are chosen randomly. See also the "Rubik" and "GLSnake" screen savers. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Square_One_%28puzzle%29 Written by Vasek Potocek.
2804 </p>
2806 |: FlipText - Draws successive pages of text. The lines flip in and out in a soothing 3D pattern. Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2807 </p>
2809 |: Providence - "A pyramid unfinished. In the zenith an eye in a triangle, surrounded by a glory, proper." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eye_of_Providence Written by Blair Tennessy.
2810 </p>
2812 |: Penrose - Draws quasiperiodic tilings; think of the implications on modern formica technology. In April 1997, Sir Roger Penrose, a British math professor who has worked with Stephen Hawking on such topics as relativity, black holes, and whether time has a beginning, filed a copyright-infringement lawsuit against the Kimberly-Clark Corporation, which Penrose said copied a pattern he created (a pattern demonstrating that "a nonrepeating pattern could exist in nature") for its Kleenex quilted toilet paper. Penrose said he doesn't like litigation but, "When it comes to the population of Great Britain being invited by a multinational to wipe their bottoms on what appears to be the work of a Knight of the Realm, then a last stand must be taken." As reported by News of the Weird #491, 4-Jul-1997. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penrose_tiling Written by Timo Korvola.
2813 </p>
2815 |: FadePlot - Draws what looks like a waving ribbon following a sinusoidal path. Written by Bas van Gaalen and Charles Vidal.
2816 </p>
2818 |: XFlame - Draws a simulation of pulsing fire. It can also take an arbitrary image and set it on fire too. Written by Carsten Haitzler and many others.
2819 </p>
2821 |: Photopile - Loads several random images, and displays them as if lying in a random pile. The pile is periodically reshuffled, with new images coming in and old ones being thrown out. Written by Jens Kilian.
2822 </p>
2824 |: GLBlur - This draws a box and a few line segments, and generates a radial blur outward from it. This creates flowing field effects. This is done by rendering the scene into a small texture, then repeatedly rendering increasingly-enlarged and increasingly-transparent versions of that texture onto the frame buffer. As such, it's quite GPU-intensive: if you don't have a very good graphics card, it will hurt your machine bad. Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2825 </p>
2827 |: Crystal - Moving polygons, similar to a kaleidoscope. See also the "Kaleidescope" and "GLeidescope" screen savers. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kaleidoscope Written by Jouk Jansen.
2828 </p>
2830 |: Interference - Color field based on computing decaying sinusoidal waves. Written by Hannu Mallat.
2831 </p>
2833 |: Carousel - Loads several random images, and displays them flying in a circular formation. The formation changes speed and direction randomly, and images periodically drop out to be replaced by new ones. Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2834 </p>
2836 |: Epicycle - This draws the path traced out by a point on the edge of a circle. That circle rotates around a point on the rim of another circle, and so on, several times. These were the basis for the pre-heliocentric model of planetary motion. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deferent_and_epicycle Written by James Youngman.
2837 </p>
2839 |: StarWars - Draws a stream of text slowly scrolling into the distance at an angle, over a star field, like at the beginning of the movie of the same name. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Star_Wars_opening_crawl Written by Jamie Zawinski and Claudio Matauoka.
2840 </p>
2842 |: Vermiculate - Draws squiggly worm-like paths. Written by Tyler Pierce.
2843 </p>
2845 |: Blaster - Draws a simulation of flying space-combat robots (cleverly disguised as colored circles) doing battle in front of a moving star field. Written by Jonathan Lin.
2846 </p>
2848 |: Discrete - More "discrete map" systems, including new variants of Hopalong and Julia, and a few others. Written by Tim Auckland.
2849 </p>
2851 |: NerveRot - Draws different shapes composed of nervously vibrating squiggles, as if seen through a camera operated by a monkey on crack. Written by Dan Bornstein.
2852 </p>
2854 |: Abstractile - Generates mosaic patterns of interlocking tiles. Written by Steve Sundstrom.
2855 </p>
2857 |: Demon - A cellular automaton that starts with a random field, and organizes it into stripes and spirals. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maxwell%27s_demon Written by David Bagley.
2858 </p>
2860 |: TronBit - Draws an animation of the character "Bit" from the film, "Tron". The "yes" state is a tetrahedron; the "no" state is the second stellation of an icosahedron; and the idle state oscillates between a small triambic icosahedron and the compound of an icosahedron and a dodecahedron. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Tron_characters#Bit http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uniform_polyhedra http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stellation Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2861 </p>
2863 |: AntInspect - Draws a trio of ants moving their spheres around a circle. Written by Blair Tennessy.
2864 </p>
2866 |: Truchet - This draws line- and arc-based truchet patterns that tile the screen. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tessellation Written by Adrian Likins.
2867 </p>
2869 |: Pedal - This is sort of a combination spirograph/string-art. It generates a large, complex polygon, and renders it by filling using an even/odd winding rule. Written by Dale Moore.
2870 </p>
2872 |: BlockTube - Draws a swirling, falling tunnel of reflective slabs. They fade from hue to hue. Written by Lars R. Damerow.
2873 </p>
2875 |: Moire - When the lines on the screen Make more lines in between, That's a moire'! http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moire_pattern Written by Jamie Zawinski and Michael Bayne.
2876 </p>
2878 |: Drift - Drifting recursive fractal cosmic flames. Written by Scott Draves.
2879 </p>
2881 |: NoseGuy - A little man with a big nose wanders around your screen saying things. Written by Dan Heller and Jamie Zawinski.
2882 </p>
2884 |: FlipScreen3D - Grabs an image of the desktop, turns it into a GL texture map, and spins it around and deforms it in various ways. Written by Ben Buxton and Jamie Zawinski.
2885 </p>
2887 |: Strange - This draws iterations to strange attractors: it's a colorful, unpredictably-animating swarm of dots that swoops and twists around. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Attractor#Strange_attractor Written by Massimino Pascal.
2888 </p>
2890 |: CWaves - This generates a languidly-scrolling vertical field of sinusoidal colors. Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2891 </p>
2893 |: IMSMap - This generates random cloud-like patterns. The idea is to take four points on the edge of the image, and assign each a random "elevation". Then find the point between them, and give it a value which is the average of the other four, plus some small random offset. Coloration is done based on elevation. Written by Juergen Nickelsen and Jamie Zawinski.
2894 </p>
2896 |: GLSlideshow - Loads a random sequence of images and smoothly scans and zooms around in each, fading from pan to pan. Written by Jamie Zawinski and Mike Oliphant.
2897 </p>
2899 |: ShadeBobs - This draws smoothly-shaded oscillating oval patterns that look something like vapor trails or neon tubes. Written by Shane Smit.
2900 </p>
2902 |: Eruption - Exploding fireworks. See also the "Fireworkx", "XFlame" and "Pyro" screen savers. Written by W.P. van Paassen.
2903 </p>
2905 |: Thornbird - Displays a view of the "Bird in a Thornbush" fractal. Written by Tim Auckland.
2906 </p>
2908 |: Halo - Draws trippy psychedelic circular patterns that hurt to look at. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moire_pattern Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2909 </p>
2911 |: XRaySwarm - Draws a few swarms of critters flying around the screen, with faded color trails behind them. Written by Chris Leger.
2912 </p>
2914 |: Anemotaxis - Anemotaxis demonstrates a search algorithm designed for locating a source of odor in turbulent atmosphere. The searcher is able to sense the odor and determine local instantaneous wind direction. The goal is to find the source in the shortest mean time. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anemotaxis Written by Eugene Balkovsky.
2915 </p>
2917 |: Queens - Solves the N-Queens problem (where N is between 5 and 10 queens). The problem is: how may one place N queens on an NxN chessboard such that no queen can attack a sister? See also the "Endgame" screen saver. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eight_queens_puzzle Written by Blair Tennessy.
2918 </p>
2920 |: Halftone - Draws the gravity force in each point on the screen seen through a halftone dot pattern. The gravity force is calculated from a set of moving mass points. View it from a distance for best effect. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halftone Written by Peter Jaric.
2921 </p>
2923 |: Moebius - This animates a 3D rendition M.C. Escher's "Moebius Strip II", an image of ants walking along the surface of a moebius strip. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moebius_strip http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maurits_Cornelis_Escher Written by Marcelo F. Vianna.
2924 </p>
2926 |: Helix - Spirally string-art-ish patterns. Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2927 </p>
2929 |: Flurry - This X11 port of the OSX screensaver of the same name draws a colourful star(fish)like flurry of particles. Original Mac version: http://homepage.mac.com/calumr Written by Calum Robinson and Tobias Sargeant.
2930 </p>
2932 |: CCurve - Generates self-similar linear fractals, including the classic "C Curve". http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Levy_C_curve Written by Rick Campbell.
2933 </p>
2935 |: Cubenetic - Draws a pulsating set of overlapping boxes with ever-chaning blobby patterns undulating across their surfaces. It's sort of a cubist Lavalite. Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2936 </p>
2938 |: GLSchool - Uses Craig Reynolds' Boids algorithm to simulate a school of fish. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boids Written by David C. Lambert.
2939 </p>
2941 |: Pacman - Simulates a game of Pac-Man on a randomly-created level. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pac-Man Written by Edwin de Jong.
2942 </p>
2944 |: Voronoi - Draws a randomly-colored Voronoi tessellation, and periodically zooms in and adds new points. The existing points also wander around. There are a set of control points on the plane, each at the center of a colored cell. Every pixel within that cell is closer to that cell's control point than to any other control point. That is what determines the cell's shapes. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voronoi_diagram Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2945 </p>
2947 |: BoxFit - Packs the screen with growing squares or circles, colored according to a horizontal or vertical gradient, or according to the colors of the desktop or a loaded image file. The objects grow until they touch, then stop. When the screen is full, they shrink away and the process restarts. Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2948 </p>
2950 |: Coral - Simulates coral growth, albeit somewhat slowly. Written by Frederick Roeber.
2951 </p>
2953 |: TopBlock - Creates a 3D world with dropping blocks that build up and up. Written by rednuht.
2954 </p>
2956 |: Lament - Animates a simulation of Lemarchand's Box, the Lament Configuration, repeatedly solving itself. Warning: occasionally opens doors. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lemarchand%27s_box Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2957 </p>
2959 |: Attraction - Uses a simple simple motion model to generate many different display modes. The control points attract each other up to a certain distance, and then begin to repel each other. The attraction/repulsion is proportional to the distance between any two particles, similar to the strong and weak nuclear forces. Written by Jamie Zawinski and John Pezaris.
2960 </p>
2962 |: Gleidescope - A kaleidoscope that operates on your desktop image, or on image files loaded from disk. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kaleidoscope Written by Andrew Dean.
2963 </p>
2965 |: CubeStorm - Draws a series of rotating 3D boxes that intersect each other and eventually fill space. Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2966 </p>
2968 |: Compass - This draws a compass, with all elements spinning about randomly, for that "lost and nauseous" feeling. Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2969 </p>
2971 |: Twang - Divides the screen into a grid, and plucks them. Written by Dan Bornstein.
2972 </p>
2974 |: BlitSpin - Repeatedly rotates a bitmap by 90 degrees by using logical operations: the bitmap is divided into quadrants, and the quadrants are shifted clockwise. Then the same thing is done again with progressively smaller quadrants, except that all sub-quadrants of a given size are rotated in parallel. As you watch it, the image appears to dissolve into static and then reconstitute itself, but rotated. Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2975 </p>
2977 |: XSpirograph - Simulates that pen-in-nested-plastic-gears toy from your childhood. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spirograph Written by Rohit Singh.
2978 </p>
2980 |: SlideScreen - This takes an image, divides it into a grid, and then randomly shuffles the squares around as if it was one of those "fifteen-puzzle" games where there is a grid of squares, one of which is missing. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fifteen_puzzle Written by Jamie Zawinski.
2981 </p>
2983 |: Piecewise - This draws a bunch of moving circles which switch from visibility to invisibility at intersection points. Written by Geoffrey Irving.
2984 </p>
2986 |: Deco - Subdivides and colors rectangles randomly. It looks kind of like Brady-Bunch-era rec-room wall paneling. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piet_Mondrian#Paris_1919.E2.80.931938 Written by Jamie Zawinski and Michael Bayne.
2987 </p>
2989 |: GLSnake - Draws a simulation of the Rubik's Snake puzzle. See also the "Rubik" and "Cube21" screen savers. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rubik%27s_Snake Written by Jamie Wilkinson, Andrew Bennetts, and Peter Aylett.
2990 </p>
2992 |: RDbomb - Draws a grid of growing square-like shapes that, once they overtake each other, react in unpredictable ways. "RD" stands for reaction-diffusion. Written by Scott Draves.
2993 </p>
2995 |: FuzzyFlakes - Falling colored snowflake/flower shapes. Written by Barry Dmytro.
2996 </p>
2998 |: Braid - Draws random color-cycling inter-braided concentric circles. Written by John Neil.
2999 </p>
3001 |: MetaBalls - Draws two dimensional metaballs: overlapping and merging balls with fuzzy edges. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metaballs Written by W.P. van Paassen.
3002 </p>
3004 |: DangerBall - Draws a ball that periodically extrudes many random spikes. Ouch! Written by Jamie Zawinski.
3005 </p>
3007 |: Molecule - Draws several different representations of molecules. Some common molecules are built in, and it can also read PDB (Protein Data Bank) files as input. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protein_Data_Bank_%28file_format%29 Written by Jamie Zawinski.
3008 </p>
3010 |: BlinkBox - Shows a ball contained inside of a bounding box. Colored blocks blink in when the ball hits the sides. Written by Jeremy English.
3011 </p>
3013 |: Sonar - This draws a sonar screen that pings (get it?) the hosts on your local network, and plots their distance (response time) from you. The three rings represent ping times of approximately 2.5, 70 and 2,000 milliseconds respectively. Alternately, it can run a simulation that doesn't involve hosts. (If pinging doesn't work, you may need to make the executable be setuid.) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ping#History Written by Stephen Martin and Jamie Zawinski.
3014 </p>
3016 |: GLCells - Cells growing, dividing and dying on your screen. Written by Matthias Toussaint.
3017 </p>
3019 |: Squiral - Draws a set of interacting, square-spiral-producing automata. The spirals grow outward until they hit something, then they go around it. Written by Jeff Epler.
3020 </p>
3022 |: Klein - This draws a visualization of a Klein bottle or some other interesting parametric surfaces. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Klein_bottle Written by Andrey Mirtchovski.
3023 </p>
3024 <hr>
3025 <h3>
3026 <a name="CHILD-MENU"></a><a href="#MAIN">Child-Menu</a>
3027 </h3>
3029 r: Rename the current child
3030 </p>
3032 t: Set the current child transparency
3033 </p>
3035 b: Set the current child border size
3036 </p>
3038 e: Ensure that all children names are unique
3039 </p>
3041 n: Ensure that all children numbers are unique
3042 </p>
3044 Delete: Delete the current child and its children in all frames
3045 </p>
3047 X: Remove the current child from its parent frame
3048 </p>
3050 h: Hide the current child
3051 </p>
3053 u: Unhide a child in the current frame
3054 </p>
3056 f: Unhide a child from all frames in the current frame
3057 </p>
3059 a: Unhide all current frame hidden children
3060 </p>
3062 Page_Up: Lower the child in the current frame
3063 </p>
3065 Page_Down: Raise the child in the current frame
3066 </p>
3067 <hr>
3068 <h3>
3069 <a name="ROOT-MENU"></a><a href="#MAIN">Root-Menu</a>
3070 </h3>
3072 n: Select the next root
3073 </p>
3075 p: Select the previous root
3076 </p>
3078 g: Rotate root geometry to next root
3079 </p>
3081 f: Rotate root geometry to previous root
3082 </p>
3084 x: Exchange two root geometry pointed with the mouse
3085 </p>
3087 r: Change the current root geometry
3088 </p>
3089 <hr>
3090 <h3>
3091 <a name="FRAME-MENU"></a><a href="#MAIN">Frame-Menu</a>
3092 </h3>
3094 a: <a href="#FRAME-ADDING-MENU">< Adding frame menu ></a>
3095 </p>
3097 l: <a href="#FRAME-LAYOUT-MENU">< Frame layout menu ></a>
3098 </p>
3100 n: <a href="#FRAME-NW-HOOK-MENU">< Frame new window hook menu ></a>
3101 </p>
3103 m: <a href="#FRAME-MOVEMENT-MENU">< Frame movement menu ></a>
3104 </p>
3106 f: <a href="#FRAME-FOCUS-POLICY">< Frame focus policy menu ></a>
3107 </p>
3109 w: <a href="#FRAME-MANAGED-WINDOW-MENU">< Managed window type menu ></a>
3110 </p>
3112 u: <a href="#FRAME-UNMANAGED-WINDOW-MENU">< Unmanaged window behaviour ></a>
3113 </p>
3115 s: <a href="#FRAME-MISCELLANEOUS-MENU">< Frame miscallenous menu ></a>
3116 </p>
3118 x: Maximize/Unmaximize the current frame in its parent frame
3119 </p>
3120 <hr>
3121 <h3>
3122 <a name="FRAME-ADDING-MENU"></a><a href="#FRAME-MENU">Frame-Adding-Menu</a>
3123 </h3>
3125 a: Add a default frame in the current frame
3126 </p>
3128 p: Add a placed frame in the current frame
3129 </p>
3130 <hr>
3131 <h3>
3132 <a name="FRAME-LAYOUT-MENU"></a><a href="#FRAME-MENU">Frame-Layout-Menu</a>
3133 </h3>
3135 a: <a href="#FRAME-FAST-LAYOUT-MENU">< Frame fast layout menu ></a>
3136 </p>
3138 b: No layout: Maximize windows in their frame - Leave frames to their original size
3139 </p>
3141 c: No layout: Maximize windows in their frame - Leave frames to their actual size
3142 </p>
3144 d: Maximize layout: Maximize windows and frames in their parent frame
3145 </p>
3147 e: <a href="#FRAME-TILE-LAYOUT-MENU">< Frame tile layout menu ></a>
3148 </p>
3150 f: <a href="#FRAME-TILE-DIR-LAYOUT-MENU">< Tile in one direction layout menu ></a>
3151 </p>
3153 g: <a href="#FRAME-TILE-SPACE-LAYOUT-MENU">< Tile with some space on one side menu ></a>
3154 </p>
3156 h: <a href="#FRAME-MAIN-WINDOW-LAYOUT-MENU">< Main window layout menu ></a>
3157 </p>
3159 i: <a href="#FRAME-GIMP-LAYOUT-MENU">< The GIMP layout menu ></a>
3160 </p>
3161 <hr>
3162 <h3>
3163 <a name="FRAME-FAST-LAYOUT-MENU"></a><a href="#FRAME-LAYOUT-MENU">Frame-Fast-Layout-Menu</a>
3164 </h3>
3166 s: Switch between two layouts
3167 </p>
3169 p: Push the current layout in the fast layout list
3170 </p>
3171 <hr>
3172 <h3>
3173 <a name="FRAME-TILE-LAYOUT-MENU"></a><a href="#FRAME-LAYOUT-MENU">Frame-Tile-Layout-Menu</a>
3174 </h3>
3176 v: Tile child in its frame (vertical)
3177 </p>
3179 h: Tile child in its frame (horizontal)
3180 </p>
3182 m: Tile child in its frame (mix: automatic choose between vertical/horizontal)
3183 </p>
3185 c: One column layout
3186 </p>
3188 l: One line layout
3189 </p>
3191 s: Tile Space: tile child in its frame leaving spaces between them
3192 </p>
3193 <hr>
3194 <h3>
3195 <a name="FRAME-TILE-DIR-LAYOUT-MENU"></a><a href="#FRAME-LAYOUT-MENU">Frame-Tile-Dir-Layout-Menu</a>
3196 </h3>
3198 l: Tile Left: main child on left and others on right
3199 </p>
3201 r: Tile Right: main child on right and others on left
3202 </p>
3204 t: Tile Top: main child on top and others on bottom
3205 </p>
3207 b: Tile Bottom: main child on bottom and others on top
3208 </p>
3209 <hr>
3210 <h3>
3211 <a name="FRAME-TILE-SPACE-LAYOUT-MENU"></a><a href="#FRAME-LAYOUT-MENU">Frame-Tile-Space-Layout-Menu</a>
3212 </h3>
3214 a: Tile Left Space: main child on left and others on right. Leave some space on the left.
3215 </p>
3216 <hr>
3217 <h3>
3218 <a name="FRAME-MAIN-WINDOW-LAYOUT-MENU"></a><a href="#FRAME-LAYOUT-MENU">Frame-Main-Window-Layout-Menu</a>
3219 </h3>
3221 r: Main window right: Main windows on the right. Others on the left.
3222 </p>
3224 l: Main window left: Main windows on the left. Others on the right.
3225 </p>
3227 t: Main window top: Main windows on the top. Others on the bottom.
3228 </p>
3230 b: Main window bottom: Main windows on the bottom. Others on the top.
3231 </p>
3233 -=- Actions on main windows list -=-
3234 </p>
3236 a: Add the current window in the main window list
3237 </p>
3239 v: Remove the current window from the main window list
3240 </p>
3242 c: Clear the main window list
3243 </p>
3244 <hr>
3245 <h3>
3246 <a name="FRAME-GIMP-LAYOUT-MENU"></a><a href="#FRAME-LAYOUT-MENU">Frame-Gimp-Layout-Menu</a>
3247 </h3>
3249 g: The GIMP Layout
3250 </p>
3252 p: Restore the previous layout
3253 </p>
3255 h: Help on the GIMP layout
3256 </p>
3258 -=- Main window layout -=-
3259 </p>
3261 r: Main window right: Main windows on the right. Others on the left.
3262 </p>
3264 l: Main window left: Main windows on the left. Others on the right.
3265 </p>
3267 t: Main window top: Main windows on the top. Others on the bottom.
3268 </p>
3270 b: Main window bottom: Main windows on the bottom. Others on the top.
3271 </p>
3273 -=- Actions on main windows list -=-
3274 </p>
3276 a: Add the current window in the main window list
3277 </p>
3279 v: Remove the current window from the main window list
3280 </p>
3282 c: Clear the main window list
3283 </p>
3284 <hr>
3285 <h3>
3286 <a name="FRAME-NW-HOOK-MENU"></a><a href="#FRAME-MENU">Frame-Nw-Hook-Menu</a>
3287 </h3>
3289 a: Open the next window in the current frame
3290 </p>
3292 b: Open the next window in the current root
3293 </p>
3295 c: Open the next window in a new frame in the current root
3296 </p>
3298 d: Open the next window in a new frame in the root frame
3299 </p>
3301 e: Open the next window in a new frame in the parent frame
3302 </p>
3304 f: Open the next window in the current frame and leave the focus on the current child
3305 </p>
3307 g: Open the next window in a named frame
3308 </p>
3310 h: Open the next window in a numbered frame
3311 </p>
3313 i: Open the window in this frame if it match nw-absorb-test
3314 </p>
3316 s: Open the window in the Surf frame if it match surf absorb-nw-test
3317 </p>
3318 <hr>
3319 <h3>
3320 <a name="FRAME-MOVEMENT-MENU"></a><a href="#FRAME-MENU">Frame-Movement-Menu</a>
3321 </h3>
3323 p: <a href="#FRAME-PACK-MENU">< Frame pack menu ></a>
3324 </p>
3326 f: <a href="#FRAME-FILL-MENU">< Frame fill menu ></a>
3327 </p>
3329 r: <a href="#FRAME-RESIZE-MENU">< Frame resize menu ></a>
3330 </p>
3332 c: Center the current frame
3333 </p>
3335 R: Select the next brother frame
3336 </p>
3338 L: Select the previous brother frame
3339 </p>
3341 U: Select the next level
3342 </p>
3344 D: Select the previous levelframe
3345 </p>
3347 T: Select the next child
3348 </p>
3349 <hr>
3350 <h3>
3351 <a name="FRAME-PACK-MENU"></a><a href="#FRAME-MOVEMENT-MENU">Frame-Pack-Menu</a>
3352 </h3>
3354 u: Pack the current frame up
3355 </p>
3357 d: Pack the current frame down
3358 </p>
3360 l: Pack the current frame left
3361 </p>
3363 r: Pack the current frame right
3364 </p>
3365 <hr>
3366 <h3>
3367 <a name="FRAME-FILL-MENU"></a><a href="#FRAME-MOVEMENT-MENU">Frame-Fill-Menu</a>
3368 </h3>
3370 u: Fill the current frame up
3371 </p>
3373 d: Fill the current frame down
3374 </p>
3376 l: Fill the current frame left
3377 </p>
3379 r: Fill the current frame right
3380 </p>
3382 a: Fill the current frame in all directions
3383 </p>
3385 v: Fill the current frame vertically
3386 </p>
3388 h: Fill the current frame horizontally
3389 </p>
3390 <hr>
3391 <h3>
3392 <a name="FRAME-RESIZE-MENU"></a><a href="#FRAME-MOVEMENT-MENU">Frame-Resize-Menu</a>
3393 </h3>
3395 u: Resize the current frame up to its half height
3396 </p>
3398 d: Resize the current frame down to its half height
3399 </p>
3401 l: Resize the current frame left to its half width
3402 </p>
3404 r: Resize the current frame right to its half width
3405 </p>
3407 a: Resize down the current frame
3408 </p>
3410 m: Resize down the current frame to its minimal size
3411 </p>
3412 <hr>
3413 <h3>
3414 <a name="FRAME-FOCUS-POLICY"></a><a href="#FRAME-MENU">Frame-Focus-Policy</a>
3415 </h3>
3417 -=- For the current frame -=-
3418 </p>
3420 a: Set a click focus policy for the current frame.
3421 </p>
3423 b: Set a sloppy focus policy for the current frame.
3424 </p>
3426 c: Set a (strict) sloppy focus policy only for windows in the current frame.
3427 </p>
3429 d: Set a sloppy select policy for the current frame.
3430 </p>
3432 -=- For all frames -=-
3433 </p>
3435 e: Set a click focus policy for all frames.
3436 </p>
3438 f: Set a sloppy focus policy for all frames.
3439 </p>
3441 g: Set a (strict) sloppy focus policy for all frames.
3442 </p>
3444 h: Set a sloppy select policy for all frames.
3445 </p>
3446 <hr>
3447 <h3>
3448 <a name="FRAME-MANAGED-WINDOW-MENU"></a><a href="#FRAME-MENU">Frame-Managed-Window-Menu</a>
3449 </h3>
3451 m: Change window types to be managed by a frame
3452 </p>
3454 a: Manage all window type
3455 </p>
3457 n: Manage only normal window type
3458 </p>
3460 u: Do not manage any window type
3461 </p>
3462 <hr>
3463 <h3>
3464 <a name="FRAME-UNMANAGED-WINDOW-MENU"></a><a href="#FRAME-MENU">Frame-Unmanaged-Window-Menu</a>
3465 </h3>
3467 s: Show unmanaged windows when frame is not selected
3468 </p>
3470 h: Hide unmanaged windows when frame is not selected
3471 </p>
3473 d: Set default behaviour to hide or not unmanaged windows when frame is not selected
3474 </p>
3476 w: Show unmanaged windows by default. This is overriden by functions above
3477 </p>
3479 i: Hide unmanaged windows by default. This is overriden by functions above
3480 </p>
3481 <hr>
3482 <h3>
3483 <a name="FRAME-MISCELLANEOUS-MENU"></a><a href="#FRAME-MENU">Frame-Miscellaneous-Menu</a>
3484 </h3>
3486 s: Show all frames info windows
3487 </p>
3489 a: Hide all frames info windows
3490 </p>
3492 h: Hide the current frame window
3493 </p>
3495 w: Show the current frame window
3496 </p>
3498 u: Renumber the current frame
3499 </p>
3501 x: Create a new frame for each window in frame
3502 </p>
3504 i: Absorb all frames subchildren in frame (explode frame opposite)
3505 </p>
3506 <hr>
3507 <h3>
3508 <a name="WINDOW-MENU"></a><a href="#MAIN">Window-Menu</a>
3509 </h3>
3511 i: Display information on the current window
3512 </p>
3514 t: Set the current window transparency
3515 </p>
3517 f: Force the current window to move in the frame (Useful only for unmanaged windows)
3518 </p>
3520 c: Force the current window to move in the center of the frame (Useful only for unmanaged windows)
3521 </p>
3523 m: Force to manage the current window by its parent frame
3524 </p>
3526 u: Force to not manage the current window by its parent frame
3527 </p>
3529 a: Adapt the current frame to the current window minimal size hints
3530 </p>
3532 w: Adapt the current frame to the current window minimal width hint
3533 </p>
3535 h: Adapt the current frame to the current window minimal height hint
3536 </p>
3537 <hr>
3538 <h3>
3539 <a name="SELECTION-MENU"></a><a href="#MAIN">Selection-Menu</a>
3540 </h3>
3542 x: Cut the current child to the selection
3543 </p>
3545 c: Copy the current child to the selection
3546 </p>
3548 v: Paste the selection in the current frame
3549 </p>
3551 p: Paste the selection in the current frame - Do not clear the selection after paste
3552 </p>
3554 Delete: Remove the current child from its parent frame
3555 </p>
3557 z: Clear the current selection
3558 </p>
3559 <hr>
3560 <h3>
3561 <a name="ACTION-BY-NAME-MENU"></a><a href="#MAIN">Action-By-Name-Menu</a>
3562 </h3>
3564 f: Focus a frame by name
3565 </p>
3567 o: Open a new frame in a named frame
3568 </p>
3570 d: Delete a frame by name
3571 </p>
3573 m: Move current child in a named frame
3574 </p>
3576 c: Copy current child in a named frame
3577 </p>
3578 <hr>
3579 <h3>
3580 <a name="ACTION-BY-NUMBER-MENU"></a><a href="#MAIN">Action-By-Number-Menu</a>
3581 </h3>
3583 f: Focus a frame by number
3584 </p>
3586 o: Open a new frame in a numbered frame
3587 </p>
3589 d: Delete a frame by number
3590 </p>
3592 m: Move current child in a numbered frame
3593 </p>
3595 c: Copy current child in a numbered frame
3596 </p>
3597 <hr>
3598 <h3>
3599 <a name="UTILITY-MENU"></a><a href="#MAIN">Utility-Menu</a>
3600 </h3>
3602 i: Identify a key
3603 </p>
3605 colon: Eval a lisp form from the query input
3606 </p>
3608 exclam: Run a program from the query input
3609 </p>
3611 o: <a href="#OTHER-WINDOW-MANAGER-MENU">< Other window manager menu ></a>
3612 </p>
3613 <hr>
3614 <h3>
3615 <a name="OTHER-WINDOW-MANAGER-MENU"></a><a href="#UTILITY-MENU">Other-Window-Manager-Menu</a>
3616 </h3>
3618 x: Run xterm
3619 </p>
3621 t: Run twm
3622 </p>
3624 i: Run icewm
3625 </p>
3627 g: Run Gnome
3628 </p>
3630 k: Run KDE
3631 </p>
3633 c: Run XFCE
3634 </p>
3636 l: Run LXDE
3637 </p>
3639 p: Prompt for an other window manager
3640 </p>
3641 <hr>
3642 <h3>
3643 <a name="CONFIGURATION-MENU"></a><a href="#MAIN">Configuration-Menu</a>
3644 </h3>
3646 a: <a href="#CONF-CORNER">< Corner Group ></a>
3647 </p>
3649 b: <a href="#CONF-HOOK">< Hook Group ></a>
3650 </p>
3652 c: <a href="#CONF-ROOT">< Root Group ></a>
3653 </p>
3655 d: <a href="#CONF-MAIN-MODE">< Main Mode Group ></a>
3656 </p>
3658 e: <a href="#CONF-FRAME-COLORS">< Frame Colors Group ></a>
3659 </p>
3661 f: <a href="#CONF-MISCELLANEOUS">< Miscellaneous Group ></a>
3662 </p>
3664 g: <a href="#CONF-SECOND-MODE">< Second Mode Group ></a>
3665 </p>
3667 h: <a href="#CONF-IDENTIFY-KEY">< Identify Key Group ></a>
3668 </p>
3670 i: <a href="#CONF-QUERY-STRING">< Query String Group ></a>
3671 </p>
3673 j: <a href="#CONF-CIRCULATE-MODE">< Circulate Mode Group ></a>
3674 </p>
3676 k: <a href="#CONF-EXPOSE-MODE">< Expose Mode Group ></a>
3677 </p>
3679 l: <a href="#CONF-INFO-MODE">< Info Mode Group ></a>
3680 </p>
3682 m: <a href="#CONF-MENU">< Menu Group ></a>
3683 </p>
3685 n: <a href="#CONF-NOTIFY-WINDOW">< Notify Window Group ></a>
3686 </p>
3688 o: <a href="#CONF-GIMP-LAYOUT">< Gimp Layout Group ></a>
3689 </p>
3691 p: <a href="#CONF-POWER-MANAGEMENT">< Power Management Group ></a>
3692 </p>
3694 q: <a href="#CONF-PLACEMENT">< Placement Group ></a>
3695 </p>
3697 r: <a href="#CONF-VOLUME-MODE">< Volume Mode Group ></a>
3698 </p>
3700 s: <a href="#CONF-TOOLBAR">< Toolbar Group ></a>
3701 </p>
3703 t: <a href="#CONF-WALLPAPER">< Wallpaper Group ></a>
3704 </p>
3706 F2: Save all configuration variables in clfswmrc
3707 </p>
3709 F3: Reset all configuration variables to their default values
3710 </p>
3711 <hr>
3712 <h3>
3713 <a name="CONF-CORNER"></a><a href="#CONFIGURATION-MENU">Conf-Corner</a>
3714 </h3>
3716 a: Configure CORNER-SIZE
3717 </p>
3719 b: Configure CORNER-MAIN-MODE-LEFT-BUTTON
3720 </p>
3722 c: Configure CORNER-MAIN-MODE-MIDDLE-BUTTON
3723 </p>
3725 d: Configure CORNER-MAIN-MODE-RIGHT-BUTTON
3726 </p>
3728 e: Configure CORNER-SECOND-MODE-LEFT-BUTTON
3729 </p>
3731 f: Configure CORNER-SECOND-MODE-MIDDLE-BUTTON
3732 </p>
3734 g: Configure CORNER-SECOND-MODE-RIGHT-BUTTON
3735 </p>
3737 h: Configure VIRTUAL-KEYBOARD-CMD
3738 </p>
3740 i: Configure CLFSWM-TERMINAL-NAME
3741 </p>
3743 j: Configure CLFSWM-TERMINAL-CMD
3744 </p>
3746 k: Configure CORNER-ERROR-MESSAGE-COLOR
3747 </p>
3749 l: Configure CORNER-ERROR-MESSAGE-DELAY
3750 </p>
3752 m: Configure CORNER-COMMAND-TRY-DELAY
3753 </p>
3755 n: Configure CORNER-COMMAND-TRY-NUMBER
3756 </p>
3757 <hr>
3758 <h3>
3759 <a name="CONF-HOOK"></a><a href="#CONFIGURATION-MENU">Conf-Hook</a>
3760 </h3>
3762 a: Configure BINDING-HOOK
3763 </p>
3765 b: Configure LOOP-HOOK
3766 </p>
3768 c: Configure MAIN-ENTRANCE-HOOK
3769 </p>
3771 d: Configure ROOT-SIZE-CHANGE
3772 </p>
3774 e: Configure INIT-HOOK
3775 </p>
3777 f: Configure CLOSE-HOOK
3778 </p>
3780 g: Configure DEFAULT-NW-HOOK
3781 </p>
3783 h: Configure QUERY-KEY-PRESS-HOOK
3784 </p>
3786 i: Configure QUERY-BUTTON-PRESS-HOOK
3787 </p>
3788 <hr>
3789 <h3>
3790 <a name="CONF-ROOT"></a><a href="#CONFIGURATION-MENU">Conf-Root</a>
3791 </h3>
3793 a: Configure CREATE-FRAME-ON-ROOT
3794 </p>
3796 b: Configure HAVE-TO-SHOW-CURRENT-ROOT
3797 </p>
3799 c: Configure SHOW-CURRENT-ROOT-DELAY
3800 </p>
3802 d: Configure SHOW-CURRENT-ROOT-PLACEMENT
3803 </p>
3805 e: Configure SHOW-CURRENT-ROOT-MESSAGE
3806 </p>
3807 <hr>
3808 <h3>
3809 <a name="CONF-MAIN-MODE"></a><a href="#CONFIGURATION-MENU">Conf-Main-Mode</a>
3810 </h3>
3812 a: Configure COLOR-MOVE-WINDOW
3813 </p>
3815 b: Configure COLOR-SELECTED
3816 </p>
3818 c: Configure COLOR-UNSELECTED
3819 </p>
3821 d: Configure COLOR-MAYBE-SELECTED
3822 </p>
3823 <hr>
3824 <h3>
3825 <a name="CONF-FRAME-COLORS"></a><a href="#CONFIGURATION-MENU">Conf-Frame-Colors</a>
3826 </h3>
3828 a: Configure FRAME-BACKGROUND
3829 </p>
3831 b: Configure FRAME-FOREGROUND
3832 </p>
3834 c: Configure FRAME-FOREGROUND-ROOT
3835 </p>
3837 d: Configure FRAME-FOREGROUND-HIDDEN
3838 </p>
3840 e: Configure FRAME-TRANSPARENCY
3841 </p>
3842 <hr>
3843 <h3>
3844 <a name="CONF-MISCELLANEOUS"></a><a href="#CONFIGURATION-MENU">Conf-Miscellaneous</a>
3845 </h3>
3847 a: Configure HAVE-TO-COMPRESS-NOTIFY
3848 </p>
3850 b: Configure TRANSPARENT-BACKGROUND
3851 </p>
3853 c: Configure DEFAULT-TRANSPARENCY
3854 </p>
3856 d: Configure SHOW-ROOT-FRAME-P
3857 </p>
3859 e: Configure BORDER-SIZE
3860 </p>
3862 f: Configure LOOP-TIMEOUT
3863 </p>
3865 g: Configure DEFAULT-FONT-STRING
3866 </p>
3868 h: Configure DEFAULT-FRAME-DATA
3869 </p>
3871 i: Configure DEFAULT-MANAGED-TYPE
3872 </p>
3874 j: Configure DEFAULT-FOCUS-POLICY
3875 </p>
3877 k: Configure SHOW-HIDE-POLICY
3878 </p>
3880 l: Configure DEFAULT-MODIFIERS
3881 </p>
3883 m: Configure NEVER-MANAGED-WINDOW-LIST
3884 </p>
3886 n: Configure HIDE-UNMANAGED-WINDOW
3887 </p>
3889 o: Configure SNAP-SIZE
3890 </p>
3892 p: Configure SPATIAL-MOVE-DELAY-BEFORE
3893 </p>
3895 q: Configure SPATIAL-MOVE-DELAY-AFTER
3896 </p>
3898 r: Configure DEFAULT-WINDOW-WIDTH
3899 </p>
3901 s: Configure DEFAULT-WINDOW-HEIGHT
3902 </p>
3903 <hr>
3904 <h3>
3905 <a name="CONF-SECOND-MODE"></a><a href="#CONFIGURATION-MENU">Conf-Second-Mode</a>
3906 </h3>
3908 a: Configure SM-BORDER-COLOR
3909 </p>
3911 b: Configure SM-BACKGROUND-COLOR
3912 </p>
3914 c: Configure SM-FOREGROUND-COLOR
3915 </p>
3917 d: Configure SM-FONT-STRING
3918 </p>
3920 e: Configure SM-WIDTH
3921 </p>
3923 f: Configure SM-HEIGHT
3924 </p>
3926 g: Configure SM-TRANSPARENCY
3927 </p>
3928 <hr>
3929 <h3>
3930 <a name="CONF-IDENTIFY-KEY"></a><a href="#CONFIGURATION-MENU">Conf-Identify-Key</a>
3931 </h3>
3933 a: Configure IDENTIFY-FONT-STRING
3934 </p>
3936 b: Configure IDENTIFY-BACKGROUND
3937 </p>
3939 c: Configure IDENTIFY-FOREGROUND
3940 </p>
3942 d: Configure IDENTIFY-BORDER
3943 </p>
3945 e: Configure IDENTIFY-TRANSPARENCY
3946 </p>
3947 <hr>
3948 <h3>
3949 <a name="CONF-QUERY-STRING"></a><a href="#CONFIGURATION-MENU">Conf-Query-String</a>
3950 </h3>
3952 a: Configure QUERY-FONT-STRING
3953 </p>
3955 b: Configure QUERY-BACKGROUND
3956 </p>
3958 c: Configure QUERY-MESSAGE-COLOR
3959 </p>
3961 d: Configure QUERY-FOREGROUND
3962 </p>
3964 e: Configure QUERY-CURSOR-COLOR
3965 </p>
3967 f: Configure QUERY-PARENT-COLOR
3968 </p>
3970 g: Configure QUERY-PARENT-ERROR-COLOR
3971 </p>
3973 h: Configure QUERY-BORDER
3974 </p>
3976 i: Configure QUERY-TRANSPARENCY
3977 </p>
3979 j: Configure QUERY-MAX-COMPLET-LENGTH
3980 </p>
3982 k: Configure QUERY-MIN-COMPLET-CHAR
3983 </p>
3984 <hr>
3985 <h3>
3986 <a name="CONF-CIRCULATE-MODE"></a><a href="#CONFIGURATION-MENU">Conf-Circulate-Mode</a>
3987 </h3>
3989 a: Configure CIRCULATE-FONT-STRING
3990 </p>
3992 b: Configure CIRCULATE-BACKGROUND
3993 </p>
3995 c: Configure CIRCULATE-FOREGROUND
3996 </p>
3998 d: Configure CIRCULATE-BORDER
3999 </p>
4001 e: Configure CIRCULATE-WIDTH
4002 </p>
4004 f: Configure CIRCULATE-HEIGHT
4005 </p>
4007 g: Configure CIRCULATE-TRANSPARENCY
4008 </p>
4010 h: Configure CIRCULATE-TEXT-LIMITE
4011 </p>
4012 <hr>
4013 <h3>
4014 <a name="CONF-EXPOSE-MODE"></a><a href="#CONFIGURATION-MENU">Conf-Expose-Mode</a>
4015 </h3>
4017 a: Configure EXPOSE-FONT-STRING
4018 </p>
4020 b: Configure EXPOSE-BACKGROUND
4021 </p>
4023 c: Configure EXPOSE-FOREGROUND
4024 </p>
4026 d: Configure EXPOSE-FOREGROUND-LETTER
4027 </p>
4029 e: Configure EXPOSE-FOREGROUND-LETTER-NOK
4030 </p>
4032 f: Configure EXPOSE-BACKGROUND-LETTER-MATCH
4033 </p>
4035 g: Configure EXPOSE-BORDER
4036 </p>
4038 h: Configure EXPOSE-VALID-ON-KEY
4039 </p>
4041 i: Configure EXPOSE-SHOW-WINDOW-TITLE
4042 </p>
4044 j: Configure EXPOSE-TRANSPARENCY
4045 </p>
4047 k: Configure EXPOSE-DIRECT-SELECT
4048 </p>
4049 <hr>
4050 <h3>
4051 <a name="CONF-INFO-MODE"></a><a href="#CONFIGURATION-MENU">Conf-Info-Mode</a>
4052 </h3>
4054 a: Configure INFO-BACKGROUND
4055 </p>
4057 b: Configure INFO-FOREGROUND
4058 </p>
4060 c: Configure INFO-BORDER
4061 </p>
4063 d: Configure INFO-LINE-CURSOR
4064 </p>
4066 e: Configure INFO-SELECTED-BACKGROUND
4067 </p>
4069 f: Configure INFO-FONT-STRING
4070 </p>
4072 g: Configure INFO-TRANSPARENCY
4073 </p>
4075 h: Configure INFO-CLICK-TO-SELECT
4076 </p>
4078 i: Configure INFO-COLOR-TITLE
4079 </p>
4081 j: Configure INFO-COLOR-UNDERLINE
4082 </p>
4084 k: Configure INFO-COLOR-FIRST
4085 </p>
4087 l: Configure INFO-COLOR-SECOND
4088 </p>
4089 <hr>
4090 <h3>
4091 <a name="CONF-MENU"></a><a href="#CONFIGURATION-MENU">Conf-Menu</a>
4092 </h3>
4094 a: Configure XDG-SECTION-LIST
4095 </p>
4097 b: Configure MENU-COLOR-SUBMENU
4098 </p>
4100 c: Configure MENU-COLOR-COMMENT
4101 </p>
4103 d: Configure MENU-COLOR-KEY
4104 </p>
4106 e: Configure MENU-COLOR-MENU-KEY
4107 </p>
4109 f: Configure MENU-KEY-BOUND-COLOR
4110 </p>
4111 <hr>
4112 <h3>
4113 <a name="CONF-NOTIFY-WINDOW"></a><a href="#CONFIGURATION-MENU">Conf-Notify-Window</a>
4114 </h3>
4116 a: Configure NOTIFY-WINDOW-FONT-STRING
4117 </p>
4119 b: Configure NOTIFY-WINDOW-BACKGROUND
4120 </p>
4122 c: Configure NOTIFY-WINDOW-FOREGROUND
4123 </p>
4125 d: Configure NOTIFY-WINDOW-BORDER
4126 </p>
4128 e: Configure NOTIFY-WINDOW-DELAY
4129 </p>
4131 f: Configure NOTIFY-WINDOW-TRANSPARENCY
4132 </p>
4133 <hr>
4134 <h3>
4135 <a name="CONF-GIMP-LAYOUT"></a><a href="#CONFIGURATION-MENU">Conf-Gimp-Layout</a>
4136 </h3>
4138 a: Configure GIMP-LAYOUT-NOTIFY-WINDOW-DELAY
4139 </p>
4140 <hr>
4141 <h3>
4142 <a name="CONF-POWER-MANAGEMENT"></a><a href="#CONFIGURATION-MENU">Conf-Power-Management</a>
4143 </h3>
4145 a: Configure POWER-SUSPEND-TO-RAM-CMD
4146 </p>
4148 b: Configure POWER-SUSPEND-TO-DISK-CMD
4149 </p>
4151 c: Configure POWER-REBOOT-CMD
4152 </p>
4154 d: Configure POWER-HALT-CMD
4155 </p>
4156 <hr>
4157 <h3>
4158 <a name="CONF-PLACEMENT"></a><a href="#CONFIGURATION-MENU">Conf-Placement</a>
4159 </h3>
4161 a: Configure BANISH-POINTER-PLACEMENT
4162 </p>
4164 b: Configure SECOND-MODE-PLACEMENT
4165 </p>
4167 c: Configure INFO-MODE-PLACEMENT
4168 </p>
4170 d: Configure QUERY-MODE-PLACEMENT
4171 </p>
4173 e: Configure CIRCULATE-MODE-PLACEMENT
4174 </p>
4176 f: Configure EXPOSE-MODE-PLACEMENT
4177 </p>
4179 g: Configure EXPOSE-QUERY-PLACEMENT
4180 </p>
4182 h: Configure NOTIFY-WINDOW-PLACEMENT
4183 </p>
4185 i: Configure ASK-CLOSE/KILL-PLACEMENT
4186 </p>
4188 j: Configure UNMANAGED-WINDOW-PLACEMENT
4189 </p>
4191 k: Configure TOOLBAR-WINDOW-PLACEMENT
4192 </p>
4194 l: Configure VOLUME-MODE-PLACEMENT
4195 </p>
4196 <hr>
4197 <h3>
4198 <a name="CONF-VOLUME-MODE"></a><a href="#CONFIGURATION-MENU">Conf-Volume-Mode</a>
4199 </h3>
4201 a: Configure VOLUME-FONT-STRING
4202 </p>
4204 b: Configure VOLUME-BACKGROUND
4205 </p>
4207 c: Configure VOLUME-FOREGROUND
4208 </p>
4210 d: Configure VOLUME-BORDER
4211 </p>
4213 e: Configure VOLUME-BORDER-SIZE
4214 </p>
4216 f: Configure VOLUME-WIDTH
4217 </p>
4219 g: Configure VOLUME-HEIGHT
4220 </p>
4222 h: Configure VOLUME-TEXT-LIMIT
4223 </p>
4225 i: Configure VOLUME-EXTERNAL-MIXER-CMD
4226 </p>
4227 <hr>
4228 <h3>
4229 <a name="CONF-TOOLBAR"></a><a href="#CONFIGURATION-MENU">Conf-Toolbar</a>
4230 </h3>
4232 a: Configure DEFAULT-TOOLBAR
4233 </p>
4235 b: Configure TOOLBAR-WINDOW-FONT-STRING
4236 </p>
4238 c: Configure TOOLBAR-WINDOW-BACKGROUND
4239 </p>
4241 d: Configure TOOLBAR-WINDOW-FOREGROUND
4242 </p>
4244 e: Configure TOOLBAR-WINDOW-BORDER
4245 </p>
4247 f: Configure TOOLBAR-DEFAULT-BORDER-SIZE
4248 </p>
4250 g: Configure TOOLBAR-WINDOW-TRANSPARENCY
4251 </p>
4253 h: Configure TOOLBAR-DEFAULT-THICKNESS
4254 </p>
4256 i: Configure TOOLBAR-DEFAULT-REFRESH-DELAY
4257 </p>
4259 j: Configure TOOLBAR-DEFAULT-AUTOHIDE
4260 </p>
4262 k: Configure TOOLBAR-SENSIBILITY
4263 </p>
4265 l: Configure TOOLBAR-CLOCK-COLOR
4266 </p>
4268 m: Configure TOOLBAR-LABEL-COLOR
4269 </p>
4271 n: Configure TOOLBAR-CLICKABLE-LABEL-COLOR
4272 </p>
4274 o: Configure TOOLBAR-CLICKABLE-CLOCK-COLOR
4275 </p>
4277 p: Configure TOOLBAR-CLOCK-ACTION
4278 </p>
4280 q: Configure TOOLBAR-CLFSWM-MENU-COLOR
4281 </p>
4283 r: Configure TOOLBAR-CPU-COLOR
4284 </p>
4286 s: Configure TOOLBAR-MEM-COLOR
4287 </p>
4289 t: Configure TOOLBAR-SYSTEM-INFO-COLOR
4290 </p>
4292 u: Configure TOOLBAR-SYSTEM-INFO-LOW-COLOR
4293 </p>
4295 v: Configure TOOLBAR-SYSTEM-INFO-ALERT-COLOR
4296 </p>
4298 w: Configure TOOLBAR-SYSTEM-INFO-URGENT-COLOR
4299 </p>
4301 x: Configure TOOLBAR-EXPOSE-MODE-BUTTON-COLOR
4302 </p>
4304 y: Configure MPD-TOOLBAR
4305 </p>
4307 z: Configure MPD-TOOLBAR-CLIENT
4308 </p>
4310 0: Configure TOOLBAR-MPD-INFO-COLOR
4311 </p>
4313 1: Configure TOOLBAR-MPD-BUTTONS-COLOR
4314 </p>
4316 2: Configure TOOLBAR-VOLUME-MODE-BUTTON-COLOR
4317 </p>
4318 <hr>
4319 <h3>
4320 <a name="CONF-WALLPAPER"></a><a href="#CONFIGURATION-MENU">Conf-Wallpaper</a>
4321 </h3>
4323 a: Configure WALLPAPER-COMMAND
4324 </p>
4325 <hr>
4326 <h3>
4327 <a name="CLFSWM-MENU"></a><a href="#MAIN">Clfswm-Menu</a>
4328 </h3>
4330 r: Reset clfswm
4331 </p>
4333 l: Reload clfswm
4334 </p>
4336 x: Exit clfswm
4337 </p>
4339 Pause: <a href="#REBOOT-HALT-MENU">< Suspend/Reboot/Halt menu ></a>
4340 </p>
4341 <hr>
4342 <h3>
4343 <a name="REBOOT-HALT-MENU"></a><a href="#CLFSWM-MENU">Reboot-Halt-Menu</a>
4344 </h3>
4346 -: Do nothing
4347 </p>
4349 s: Suspend the computer to RAM
4350 </p>
4352 d: Suspend the computer to DISK
4353 </p>
4355 r: Reboot the computer
4356 </p>
4358 h: Halt the computer
4359 </p>
4360 <hr>
4362 <small>
4364 This documentation was produced with the CLFSWM auto-doc functions. To reproduce it, use the produce-menu-doc-html-in-file or
4365 the produce-all-docs function from the Lisp REPL.
4366 </small>
4367 </p>
4369 <small>
4371 Something like this:<br>
4372 LISP> (in-package :clfswm)<br>
4373 CLFSWM> (produce-menu-doc-html-in-file "my-menu.html")<br>
4374 or<br> CLFSWM> (produce-all-docs)
4375 </small>
4376 </p>
4377 </body>
4378 </html>