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Manpage of GXMESSAGE
GXMESSAGE
Section: (1)
Updated: January 21st, 2006
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NAME
gxmessage - a GTK-based xmessage clone
SYNOPSIS
gxmessage [OPTIONS] message ...
gxmessage [OPTIONS] -file FILENAME
DESCRIPTION
gxmessage opens a window to display a message obtained from the command
line, from a file, or from stdin. The window includes a row of buttons,
each of which causes the program to exit with a different return code.
OPTIONS
gxmessage should accept any option xmessage would, although some
(such as -bw and -xrm) are silently ignored. Options supported
by gxmessage are as follows:
- -bg COLOUR
-
Sets the background colour of the message to COLOUR. Examples: red,
"#c90", "#446a7e".
- -borderless
-
Opens the gxmessage window without the usual window frame. This option
is not compatible with xmessage.
- -buttons BUTTON_LIST
-
Defines the buttons to be created. BUTTON_LIST is a comma-separated list
of LABEL:VALUE pairs, one for each button. The LABEL is
the text that appears on the button. The VALUE is the code the program
will exit with if that button is pressed. Commas and colons can be escaped
using backslashes (\). As well as ordinary text, the LABEL can specify
a GTK "stock" button, like "GTK_STOCK_CANCEL", or it can include an underscore
(_) to specify a keyboard accelerator. If VALUEs are omitted, they
default to 101, 102, 103, etc., in order. If no -buttons option is given,
BUTTON_LIST defaults to "okay:0".
gxmessage -buttons "Foo:42,Bar:63" "Example"
echo $?
gxmessage -buttons "_Foo,_Bar" "Example"
echo $?
gxmessage "Example"
echo $?
gxmessage -buttons "GTK_STOCK_OK:0" "Example"
echo $?
gxmessage -buttons "Hello\, world" "Example"
- -center
-
Opens the gxmessage window in the middle of the screen.
- -default LABEL
-
Opens the gxmessage window with input focused on the specified button.
LABEL is one of the LABELs in BUTTON_LIST (see
-buttons, above).
- -display DISPLAY
-
Specifies the X display to use.
- -encoding CHARSET
-
Specifies the encoding of the message text. By default, the message text is
assumed to match the encoding of the current locale. This option is not
compatible with xmessage.
- -entry
-
Adds a text entry box to the gxmessage window. When the window closes,
any text in the entry box will be copied to stdout. This option is not
compatible with xmessage and can't be used at the same time as the
-print option.
- -entrytext TEXT
-
Same as -entry, but sets the default entry box contents to TEXT.
This option is not compatible with xmessage.
- -fg COLOUR
-
Sets the message text colour to COLOUR.
- -file FILENAME
-
Causes the named file to be used as the message source. If a dash (-) is used
in place of FILENAME, the message will be read from stdin.
- -fn | -font FONT
-
Specifies the message font, using GTK2's font specification system. For
example, -font "serif italic 14". (GTK2's font system is not compatible
with xmessage. See the Compatibility section, below, for a workaround.)
- -geometry GEOMETRY
-
Sets the window's size (position is ignored by gxmessage). Example:
-geometry 400x200
- -help
-
Displays basic usage information then exits.
- -iconic
-
Opens the gxmessage window in its iconized (minimized) state.
- -name NAME
-
Sets the gxmessage window's name to NAME.
- -nearmouse
-
Opens the gxmessage window near the mouse pointer.
- -nofocus
-
Prevents the gxmessage window from receiving focus when it opens.
This option is not compatible with xmessage.
- -print
-
Writes the LABEL of the selected button to stdout.
- -timeout SECONDS
-
Automatically closes the gxmessage window with an exit code of 0 if no
button is pressed within SECONDS seconds. (The -entry and
-entrytext options cause -timeout to be ignored.)
- -title TITLE
-
Sets the gxmessage window's title to TITLE.
- -version
-
Displays the program's version number then exits. This option is not
compatible with xmessage.
- -wrap
-
Causes lines to wrap rather than exceed the width of the window. This option
is not compatible with xmessage.
GTK DEFAULTS
The program's default appearance can be adjusted using GTK resource files.
The main text display widget is named gxmessage-textview.
The text entry widget is named gxmessage-entry.
# Example: ~/.gtkrc-2.0
style "gxmsg" {
text[NORMAL] = "#cc9900"
base[NORMAL] = "#660000"
text[SELECTED] = "#660000"
base[SELECTED] = "#cc9900"
font_name = "monospace"
}
widget "*.gxmessage-textview" style "gxmsg"
widget "*.gxmessage-entry" style "gxmsg"
EXIT STATUS
The program returns code 1 if an error occurs, or if the window is closed
without a button-press or timeout event.
Pressing the ESC key also closes the window with an exit code of 1.
COMPATIBILITY WITH XMESSAGE
Fall back to xmessage if gxmessage isn't available:
#!/bin/bash
XMESSAGE=$(which gxmessage) || XMESSAGE=xmessage
$XMESSAGE "hello, world"
If you specify fonts, check which program you're using:
font="monospace 14"
[ "$XMESSAGE" = xmessage ] && font=""
$XMESSAGE ${font:+-fn "$font"} "hello, world"
Don't use double-dashed command line options:
$XMESSAGE "hello, world" -buttons good
$XMESSAGE "hello, world" --buttons bad
Don't use the gxmessage-specific options:
-entry, -entrytext, -borderless, -wrap,
-encoding, -nofocus, -version, -h, -?
BUGS
The position component of -geometry values is ignored by gxmessage.
If you discover other bugs in the most recent version of gxmessage,
please get in touch.
SEE ALSO
xmessage(1), zenity(1), dialog(1)
AUTHORS
Timothy Musson <trmusson@ihug.co.nz>
Index
- NAME
-
- SYNOPSIS
-
- DESCRIPTION
-
- OPTIONS
-
- GTK DEFAULTS
-
- EXIT STATUS
-
- COMPATIBILITY WITH XMESSAGE
-
- BUGS
-
- SEE ALSO
-
- AUTHORS
-
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Time: 07:36:33 GMT, November 07, 2006