WMrack(1) | General Commands Manual | WMrack(1) |
wmrack - CD Player and Mixer dock applet
wmrack [options]
The wmrack is a combined CD player and Audio Mixer designed to be used with WindowMaker's dock. It can also be used with other window managers, and can be swallowed by a variety of tools, such as fvwm's button bar or gnome's panel. wmrack handles mounted volumes, opens and closes the tray, can display the current position in various ways and skips also data tracks. It gives you access to all your mixer devices, so that you may change volume or balance and set the record source.
The other colors of the LED can be changed using the -l option.
To find out what colors are available, try showrgb (part of X11).
For the design of own XPM, the ledcolor is made available through the use of the symbolic xpm color names led_color_high, led_color_low, and led_color_med. There is also a symbol named led_color_back to get the default background color of the led-display. It can be changed using the -l option.
To find out what colors are available, try showrgb (part of X11).
wmrack can be called using different ways. The most common invocation is from your dock file:
wmrack
WMRack
POSITION 2 -1 0
wmrack
--withdrawn
Another way to call wmrack is to swallow it into the afterstep(1) Wharf(1). This is best done placing the following line into your .steprc:
*Wharf WMRack nil Swallow "wmrack" wmrack &
This method will also work for other button-bars, such as the FvwmButtons(1) of the fvwm(1) window manager.
The wmrack features a simple click interface. All times the buttons will show a standard sign which specifies the action it will do. But there are some notable extensions to that explained below.
You can always change the controls shown by clicking the middle button (this is the one which shows a disc or a speaker) of the controls. This button will show a symbol of the controls you can change to by pressing it (the disc and the speaker).
If you click this button with Control-Button-3, WMrack will exit.
The default behavior of wmrack is to try to read the cdrom at startup. If there was no cd, it will not try again unless you press the close or play button. This will close the cdrom and again try to read it. Unless there is a cd, wmrack will again suspend until your next action.
The cd player also offers a play list functionality. By default it will map out all data tracks of the current cdrom, but you can also randomize the list or program it to the tracks you want to hear. These functions are only available while a cdrom is in the drive and the drive is stopped.
You will see the short message RA:ND in the time display.
Main controls of the mixer are the two volume scales at the left and the right side of the display. Using the mouse the scales can be modified.
Clicking into the alphanumeric display changes the currently shown mixer device. Some of the valid devices are VOlume, BAss, TReble, SYnth, PCm, SPeaker, LIne, MIc, CD, MiXer, Pcm2, REcord, IGain, OGain, Line1, Line2, and Line3. You can also remove devices from this list.
Below the change-controls button is the record source button. It show either a 'X' and is inactive, or it show a speaker or a recording sign and is active. By pressing this button you can change the source of your recordings.
Copyright 1997, Oliver Graf <ograf@fga.de>. 2003-2006, Chris Waters Most styles copyright 1997, Heiko Wagner <hwagner@fga.de>.
No guarantees or warranties or anything are provided or implied in any way whatsoever. Use this program at your own risk. Permission to use this program for any purpose is given, as long as the copyright is kept intact. The program and its source code may be copied under the terms of the GNU General Public License. See the file "COPYING" for details.
Oliver Graf <ograf@fga.de> -- original author
Chris Waters <xtifr@users.sourceforge.net> -- current maintainer
Heiko Wagner <hwagner@fga.de> -- the hyped window shapes
Rob Malda <malda@cs.hope.edu> -- who had written ascd and asmixer
Michael Kurz <mkurz@rzws.fh-aalen.de> -- also for ascd and asmixer
Thomas McWilliams <tgm@netcom.com> -- who has done Workbone
1 June 1997 | 3rd Berkeley Distribution |