urclock - (unknown subject)

NAME  SYNOPSIS  DESCRIPTION  OPTIONS  X RESOURCES  TITLES AND ICONS  REMINDERS  ENVIRONMENT  BUGS  HISTORY  AUTHORS 

NAME

urclock (oUR CLOCK) −− clock and appointment reminder for X11

SYNOPSIS

urclock [options]

DESCRIPTION

urclock -- version 9.31 -- is an analog clock for X intended as an xclock(1) replacement that conserves memory and has extra features: urclock enters reverse video if there is mail waiting; an appointment reminder is also builtin.

OPTIONS

The options supported by urclock:
−display
displayname

Attempt to open a window on the named X display. In the absence of this option, the display specified by the "DISPLAY" environment variable is used.

−geometry geom

Create the window with the specified X window geometry [default "80x80"].

−bg color

Window background color [default "white"].

−fg color

Window foreground color [default "black"].

−fn fontname

Select font used for reminders [default "7x14"].

−nodate

Do not display today’s date on the face of the clock.

−iconic

Start iconified, if supported by the window manager.

−adjust ddhhmm

Adjust the clock by +/− ddhhmm (dd = days, hh = hours, mm = minutes) to fix an incorrect clock without being root or for working in another time-zone.

−update n

Update clock face every n seconds [default 30]. If n=1, a seconds hand is displayed.

−mail n

Check for new mail every n seconds [default 60]. The actual interval is a multiple of the clock update interval.

−mailfile mailfile

Override environmental variable "MAIL" with mailfile as location for mail.

−mailspawn cmd

Execute cmd when the face of the clock is clicked by the mouse button.

#geom

Specify the preferred icon window size [default "65x65"].

Some of these options may not be available based on how urclock was compiled. Run urclock −help to determine which features are available.

X RESOURCES

No X resources are used -- only command-line options.

TITLES AND ICONS

The window and icon titles are set to the day of the week and the date. The date is also displayed on the lower half of the clock unless the −nodate option is specified. The icon window is "active" and will show the time, if supported by the window manager.

REMINDERS

The ˜/.rclock file (note: not ˜/.urclock) lists the messages to display and/or the programs to run at specified times and dates. At the specified time, urclock will pop-up a window in the center of the screen to display the message or will simply run the scheduled program. urclock will read the ˜/.rclock file at startup, and every 10 minutes (to look for changes) and after a message window has been dismissed (to find the next appointment).

An entry in ˜/.rclock may be one of two formats (blank and comment lines will be ignored):

hh:mm [dd] MM/DD/YY message[; program]

or

[hh:mm [dd] MM/DD/YY [message]]; program

hh − hour (0−23; * = current)

mm − minute (0−59; * = 0)

dd − days-of-week (some/all/none of umtwrfs; * = all)

MM − month (1−12; * = current)

DD − day of month (1−31; * = current)

YY − year (0−99 or 1900−????; * = current)

message − message to display

program − program to execute

The days-of-the-week use the following abbreviations: u=Sunday, m=Monday, t=Tuesday, w=Wednesday, r=Thursday, f=Friday, s=Saturday, *=all.

If message is empty and program has been specified, it is executed without a dialog box. If time/date are also not specified, program is executed on start-up. Note message may contain escape values (\n: newline, \;: semicolon).

Here’s a silly example file that shows some of the permissible constructs:

# ˜/.rclock − My appointment file
# startup functions
; xsetroot −solid Black &
# cron functions
10:00; xsetroot −solid Grey25 &
14:00; xsetroot −solid Grey75 &
# daily/weekly reminders
08:15 mtwrf * Good Morning!\\nRead News?; urxvt −e News
12:00 mtwrf * Lunch Time!
17:00 mtwrf * Go Home
23:00 mtwrf * Still Here? Go to bed
08:10 twrf * Did you do your time card yesterday?
15:00 f * Friday, do your time card early!
16:00 mtwr * Do your time card
16:30 mtwrf * Did you do your time card?
*:00 us * It's the weekend, why are you here?
8:15 f */13/* Friday the 13th! Careful!
8:15 * 4/1/* fkrkrmfismsmkd...dkdfk
8:16 * 4/1/* April Fools!
# birthdays/anniversaries
16:00 05/21/* Pam's Birthday (next week)
16:00 05/24/* Pam's Birthday (in a few days)
# once−of appointments
08:30 03/15/94 Dentist appointment
08:30 03/15/1999 Dentist appointment
08:30 03/15/2004 Dentist appointment

ENVIRONMENT

urclock uses the environment variable MAIL to determine the location of the user’s mail spool file unless the −mailfile option is specified.

BUGS

urclock is not very smart about dealing with errors encountered while reading the ˜/.rclock file. Each reminder must be a single line not exceeding 255 characters. Reminder windows are sometimes not redrawn (left blank) when raised or uncovered.

HISTORY

When "unicodifying" rxvt to urxvt-unicode, other programs than rxvt were dropped, as they would be identical to their rxvt counterparts, and therefore could still be installed independently by installing rxvt.

Since distributions have started dropping rxvt (and thus rclock), the rclock program has been added to the rxvt-unicode package under the name urclock. It should be functionally identical to rxvt’s rclock program, including using the same configuration file name.

AUTHORS

Rob Nation <[email protected]>

Modifications by mj olesen <[email protected]>

Modifications by Marc A. Lehmann <[email protected]>

Modifications by Emanuele Giaquinta <[email protected]>

Currently maintained as part of the rxvt-unicode package.


Updated 2024-01-29 - jenkler.se | uex.se