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| author | jao <jao@gnu.org> | 2022-07-24 16:00:23 +0100 | 
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| committer | jao <jao@gnu.org> | 2022-07-24 16:03:15 +0100 | 
| commit | ac8a9ed723f1fed8d8a7158e135c72e2b92677c5 (patch) | |
| tree | 67fd171f487736b6e7d406e85815120e4a00cb9d /doc | |
| parent | 6c141f1efc67166518d17cf71497b31ea1fbbed3 (diff) | |
| download | xmobar-ac8a9ed723f1fed8d8a7158e135c72e2b92677c5.tar.gz xmobar-ac8a9ed723f1fed8d8a7158e135c72e2b92677c5.tar.bz2  | |
documentation: improvements for xmobar-in-haskell docs
Diffstat (limited to 'doc')
| -rw-r--r-- | doc/using-haskell.org | 125 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | doc/write-your-own-plugin.org | 73 | 
2 files changed, 125 insertions, 73 deletions
diff --git a/doc/using-haskell.org b/doc/using-haskell.org new file mode 100644 index 0000000..5c48c06 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/using-haskell.org @@ -0,0 +1,125 @@ +#+title: Using Haskell + +* Writing your own xmobar in Haskell +  :PROPERTIES: +  :CUSTOM_ID: xmobar-in-haskell +  :END: + +  Besides an standalone program, ~xmobar~ is also a Haskell library providing +  an interface to write your own status bar. You can write, instead of a +  configuration file, a real Haskell program that will be compiled and run +  when you invoke =xmobar=. + +  Make sure that ~ghc~ will be able to locate the xmobar library, e.g. with + +  #+begin_src shell +    cabal install --lib xmobar +  #+end_src + +  and then write your Haskell configuration and main function using the +  functions and types exported in the library, which closely resemble those +  used in configuration files.  Here's a small example: + +  #+begin_src haskell +    import Xmobar + +    config :: Config +    config = +      defaultConfig +        { font = "xft:Terminus-8", +          allDesktops = True, +          alpha = 200, +          commands = +            [ Run XMonadLog, +              Run $ Memory ["t", "Mem: <usedratio>%"] 10, +              Run $ Kbd [], +              Run $ Date "%a %_d %b %Y <fc=#ee9a00>%H:%M:%S</fc>" "date" 10 +            ], +          template = "%XMonadLog% }{ %kbd% | %date% | %memory%", +          alignSep = "}{" +        } + +    main :: IO () +    main = xmobar config +  #+end_src + +  You can then for instance run =ghc --make xmobar.hs= to create a new xmobar +  executable running exactly the monitors defined above.  Or put your +  =xmobar.hs= program in =~/.config/xmobar/xmobar.hs= and, when running the +  system-wide xmobar, it will notice that you have your own implementation +  and (re)compile and run it as needed. + +* Writing a plugin +  :PROPERTIES: +  :CUSTOM_ID: writing-a-plugin +  :END: +  Writing a plugin for xmobar is very simple! + +  First, you need to create a data type with at least one constructor.  Next +  you must declare this data type an instance of the =Exec= class, by defining +  the one needed method (alternatively =start= or =run=) and 3 optional ones +  (=alias=, =rate=, and =trigger=): + +  #+begin_src haskell +    start   :: e -> (String -> IO ()) -> IO () +    run     :: e -> IO String +    rate    :: e -> Int +    alias   :: e -> String +    trigger :: e -> (Maybe SignalType -> IO ()) -> IO () +  #+end_src + +  =start= must receive a callback to be used to display the =String= produced by +  the plugin. This method can be used for plugins that need to perform +  asynchronous actions. See =src/Xmobar/Plugins/PipeReader.hs= for an example. + +  =run= can be used for simpler plugins. If you define only =run= the plugin +  will be run every second. To overwrite this default you just need to +  implement =rate=, which must return the number of tenth of seconds between +  every successive runs. See [[../examples/xmobar.hs][examples/xmobar.hs]] for an example of a plugin +  that runs just once, and [[../src/Xmobar/Plugins/Date.hs][src/Xmobar/Plugins/Date.hs]] for one that +  implements =rate=. + +  Notice that Date could be implemented as: + +  #+begin_src haskell +    instance Exec Date where +        alias (Date _ a _) = a +        start (Date f _ r) = date f r + +    date :: String -> Int -> (String -> IO ()) -> IO () +    date format r callback = do go +        where go = do +                t <- toCalendarTime =<< getClockTime +                callback $ formatCalendarTime defaultTimeLocale format t +                tenthSeconds r >> go +  #+end_src + +  Modulo some technicalities like refreshing the time-zone in a clever way, +  this implementation is equivalent to the one you can read in +  =Plugins/Date.hs=. + +  =alias= is the name to be used in the output template. Default alias will be +  the data type constructor. + +  After that your type constructor can be used as an argument for the +  Runnable type constructor =Run= in the =commands= list of the configuration +  options. + +  If your plugin only implements =alias= and =start=, then it is advisable to +  put it into the =Xmobar/Plugins/Monitors= directory and use one of the many +  =run*= functions in [[../src/Xmobar/Plugins/Monitors/Common/Run.hs][Xmobar.Plugins.Monitors.Run]] in order to define +  =start=. The =Exec= instance should then live in [[../src/Xmobar/Plugins/Monitors.hs][Xmobar.Plugins.Monitors]]. + +* Using a Plugin + +  To use your new plugin, you just need to use a pure Haskell configuration +  for xmobar (as explained [[#xmobar-in-haskell][above]]) and load your definitions in your =xmobar.hs= +  file. You can see an example in [[../examples/xmobar.hs][examples/xmobar.hs]] showing you how to write +  a Haskell configuration that uses a new plugin, all in one file. + +  When xmobar runs with the full path to that Haskell file as its argument +  (or if you put it in =~/.config/xmobar/xmobar.hs=), and with the xmobar +  library installed (e.g., with =cabal install --lib xmobar=), the Haskell +  code will be compiled as needed, and the new executable spawned for you. + +  That's it! diff --git a/doc/write-your-own-plugin.org b/doc/write-your-own-plugin.org deleted file mode 100644 index fb1ca85..0000000 --- a/doc/write-your-own-plugin.org +++ /dev/null @@ -1,73 +0,0 @@ -#+title: Writing your own plugin - -*** Writing a plugin -    Writing a plugin for xmobar is very simple! - -    First, you need to create a data type with at least one constructor.  Next -    you must declare this data type an instance of the =Exec= class, by defining -    the one needed method (alternatively =start= or =run=) and 3 optional ones -    (=alias=, =rate=, and =trigger=): - -    #+begin_src haskell -      start   :: e -> (String -> IO ()) -> IO () -      run     :: e -> IO String -      rate    :: e -> Int -      alias   :: e -> String -      trigger :: e -> (Maybe SignalType -> IO ()) -> IO () -    #+end_src - -    =start= must receive a callback to be used to display the =String= produced by -    the plugin. This method can be used for plugins that need to perform -    asynchronous actions. See =src/Xmobar/Plugins/PipeReader.hs= for an example. - -    =run= can be used for simpler plugins. If you define only =run= the plugin -    will be run every second. To overwrite this default you just need to -    implement =rate=, which must return the number of tenth of seconds between -    every successive runs. See [[../examples/xmobar.hs][examples/xmobar.hs]] for an example of a plugin -    that runs just once, and [[../src/Xmobar/Plugins/Date.hs][src/Xmobar/Plugins/Date.hs]] for one that -    implements =rate=. - -    Notice that Date could be implemented as: - -    #+begin_src haskell -      instance Exec Date where -          alias (Date _ a _) = a -          start (Date f _ r) = date f r - -      date :: String -> Int -> (String -> IO ()) -> IO () -      date format r callback = do go -          where go = do -                  t <- toCalendarTime =<< getClockTime -                  callback $ formatCalendarTime defaultTimeLocale format t -                  tenthSeconds r >> go -    #+end_src - -    Modulo some technicalities like refreshing the time-zone in a clever way, -    this implementation is equivalent to the one you can read in -    =Plugins/Date.hs=. - -    =alias= is the name to be used in the output template. Default alias will be -    the data type constructor. - -    After that your type constructor can be used as an argument for the -    Runnable type constructor =Run= in the =commands= list of the configuration -    options. - -    If your plugin only implements =alias= and =start=, then it is advisable to -    put it into the =Xmobar/Plugins/Monitors= directory and use one of the many -    =run*= functions in [[../src/Xmobar/Plugins/Monitors/Common/Run.hs][Xmobar.Plugins.Monitors.Run]] in order to define -    =start=. The =Exec= instance should then live in [[../src/Xmobar/Plugins/Monitors.hs][Xmobar.Plugins.Monitors]]. - -*** Using a Plugin - -    To use your new plugin, you need to use a pure Haskell configuration for -    xmobar (as explained [[../readme.org#xmobar-in-haskell][here)]] and load your definitions in your =xmobar.hs= -    file. You can see an example in [[../examples/xmobar.hs][examples/xmobar.hs]] showing you how to -    write a Haskell configuration that uses a new plugin, all in one file. - -    When xmobar runs with the full path to that Haskell file as its argument -    (or if you put it in =~/.config/xmobar/xmobar.hs=), and with the xmobar -    library installed (e.g., with =cabal install --lib xmobar=), the Haskell -    code will be compiled as needed, and the new executable spawned for you. - -    That's it!  | 
