msgid "" msgstr "" "Project-Id-Version: PACKAGE VERSION\n" "POT-Creation-Date: 2011-03-23 21:19+0500\n" "PO-Revision-Date: 2011-01-21 01:40+0500\n" "Last-Translator: Automatically generated\n" "Language-Team: none\n" "Language: el\n" "MIME-Version: 1.0\n" "Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8\n" "Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit\n" "Plural-Forms: nplurals=2; plural=(n != 1);\n" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(title):6 msgid "The Openbox Configuration HOWTO" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(author:title):8 #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(author:title):11 msgid "Author" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(mail:link):9 msgid "nathanzachary" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(mail:link):12 msgid "nightmorph" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(abstract):15 msgid "" "This guide shows you how to install the Openbox window manager, and " "references many potential programs to be used in conjunction with an Openbox " "session." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(version):24 msgid "7" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(date):25 msgid "2010-12-25" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(title):28 msgid "Introduction" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(title):31 msgid "What is Openbox?" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):34 msgid "" "So, you've installed The X Server and realised that TWM just isn't going to cut it for your needs. You " "may have also had some experience with big desktop environments like KDE, GNOME, and Xfce. One component of those larger desktop suites is called the " "window manager (or WM for short). A window manager is responsible for the " "appearance and placement of the containers (or \"windows\") inside which " "programs run. Openbox is a minimalistic, no-frills-attached window manager." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(title):50 msgid "Why should I use it?" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):53 msgid "" "Openbox, unlike the larger desktop environments, depends on very few " "libraries. For that reason, it can provide a lightweight graphic environment " "that runs very quickly, even on older hardware. Whether your hardware is old " "or new, Openbox also provides a highly customisable and unobtrusive working " "environment. That means that if you don't want or need a panel, taskbar, " "clock, or any other program, those choices are yours to make!" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(title):67 msgid "Installation and configuration" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(title):69 msgid "Initial installation" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):72 msgid "" "After you have emerged and configured xorg-server, installing Openbox " "can be done in one simple command:" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre:caption):77 msgid "Installing Openbox" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre):77 #, no-wrap msgid "" "\n" "# emerge -av openbox\n" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):81 msgid "" "Just like with other window managers and desktop environments, you will need " "to tell the X Server to load Openbox automatically, by adding it to your " "~/.xinitrc." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre:caption):87 msgid "Adding Openbox to your .xinitrc" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre):87 #, no-wrap msgid "" "\n" "$ echo \"exec openbox-session\" >> ~/.xinitrc\n" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):91 msgid "" "This will automatically start your Openbox session when you type startx at the terminal." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(impo):96 msgid "" "As each user has his or her own .xinitrc, you need to make sure " "to issue that command as your user, not as root." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(note):101 msgid "" "If you experience problems with automounting, or if you use dbus and " "ConsoleKit, you may want to put exec ck-launch-session dbus-launch --sh-" "syntax --exit-with-session openbox-session in your .xinitrc " "instead of the default mentioned above." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(note):108 msgid "" "You can also replace the KDE, GNOME, or Xfce default window manager with " "Openbox by following the Openbox inside " "desktop environments directions." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):114 msgid "" "Now that you have emerged Openbox and added it to your .xinitrc, go ahead and issue the startx command to see Openbox in " "action. As you can see, the desktop is simply a cluttered mess! In following " "with the Openbox philosophy, what you will see is a barebones environment " "from which you can build your desktop completely to your liking." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):122 msgid "" "Since you're looking at nothing more than a black screen, you may be " "wondering where the menu is. If you click your right mouse button, you will " "notice that a menu pops up in the location of your cursor. This menu is " "nothing more than an example to illustrate the style of an Openbox menu. " "Since it is just an example, none of the items in the menu will work " "unless you have actually emerged those programs. In the next section, you " "will see how to create your own menu that contains links to your " "programs." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(impo):132 msgid "" "If you click to view the menu and notice that there is nothing legible, you " "need to install some fonts. Two common choices are media-fonts/corefonts and media-fonts/ttf-bitstream-vera." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(title):141 msgid "Menu configuration" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):144 msgid "" "Since the default Openbox menu is essentially useless to you for the reasons " "mentioned above, it's time that we create one that will work. Everything in " "the Openbox menu is written in the appropriately named menu.xml " "file, which can be in the user-specific location of ~/.config/openbox/" "menu.xml, or in the system-wide location of /etc/xdg/openbox/" "menu.xml. By default, the only menu.xml file that is " "created is the system-wide one which applies to all users on the system." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):155 msgid "" "An easy way to get a basic menu file which you can modify is to use " "MenuMaker, which will generate a menu.xml file based on the " "programs which you currently have installed on your system. To do so, you " "must firstly emerge it:" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre:caption):162 msgid "Installing MenuMaker" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre):162 #, no-wrap msgid "" "\n" "# emerge menumaker\n" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):166 msgid "" "Once it is installed, make sure to logout of root, and back into your user " "account. You then instruct MenuMaker to create a menu specifically using the " "Openbox XML syntax:" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre:caption):172 msgid "Using MenuMaker to generate a basic Openbox menu.xml" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre):172 #, no-wrap msgid "" "\n" "$ mmaker -v OpenBox3\n" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):176 msgid "" "The generated menu will be located at ~/.config/openbox/menu.xml. You can then choose to leave it as your user-specific menu.xml, or to additionally copy it to the system-wide menu configuration as " "well:" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre:caption):183 msgid "Overwriting the default system-wide menu.xml files" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre):183 #, no-wrap msgid "" "\n" "# cp .config/openbox/menu.xml /etc/xdg/openbox/menu.xml\n" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(impo):187 msgid "" "It is a good idea to use MenuMaker to generate a default menu, as it will " "have the Openbox root-menu items. These items include a virtual desktop " "switcher, and the commands to restart and exit your Openbox session." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):193 msgid "" "When you open up the menu.xml file in your favourite editor " "(nano, for example), you will notice that the XML tags used are very human-" "readable and easily understandable. You may choose to modify the default " "file to fit your needs, or you may want to write it from scratch (don't " "worry, it's really not that difficult). The basic syntax for the menu XML is " "as follows:" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre:caption):201 #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre:caption):220 #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre:caption):285 msgid "Editing the menu.xml file" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre):201 #, no-wrap msgid "" "\n" "<?xml version=\"1.0\" encoding=\"UTF-8\"?>\n" "<openbox_menu>\n" "<separator label=\"NAME_OF_SEPARATOR\" />\n" "<menu id=\"IDENTIFIER\" label=\"NAME_OF_MENU\">\n" " <item label=\"NAME_OF_PROGRAM\">\n" " <action name=\"execute\"><execute>/LOCATION/OF/BINARY</execute></action>\n" " </item>\n" "</menu>\n" "</openbox_menu>\n" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):213 msgid "" "The above example will work for any applications that launch with standard " "options in their own windows, but what if you need to append options to the " "program at launch time? That is no problem either, but the syntax of the " "menu item is slightly different." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre):220 #, no-wrap msgid "" "\n" "<?xml version=\"1.0\" encoding=\"UTF-8\"?>\n" "<openbox_menu>\n" "<separator label=\"NAME_OF_SEPARATOR\" />\n" "<menu id=\"IDENTIFIER\" label=\"NAME_OF_MENU\">\n" " <item label=\"NAME_OF_PROGRAM\">\n" " <action name=\"execute\"><command>/LOCATION/OF/BINARY --OPTION1 --OPTION2</command></action>\n" " </item>\n" "</menu>\n" "</openbox_menu>\n" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):232 msgid "" "Simply replace anything in CAPS in the above two examples with your " "information. Alternatively, you can emerge obmenu, which is a " "graphical interface allowing you to create your menus without having to " "manually edit the menu.xml file. It is a very small application " "and offers a nice amount of customisation without typing any XML." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(title):243 msgid "Openbox theme and behaviour configuration" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):246 msgid "" "Aside from being minimalistic and lightweight, Openbox is also surprisingly " "customisable and flexible. As a user, you can easily change various settings " "related to theme, appearance, window placement, docking, and more. There are " "two options for configuring these settings within Openbox. You may either " "manually edit ~/.config/openbox/rc.xml, or you may want a GUI " "to help you quickly change settings." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):255 msgid "" "If you want to manually edit rc.xml, you simply open up your " "favourite text editor and start making changes. You might want to make a " "backup of the original file just in case, and store it in a location like " "~/.config/openbox/rc.xml.default. There are plenty of comments " "within the document itself that should help you with editing. Alternatively, " "you may want to look at the Openbox configuration guides." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):266 msgid "" "If manually editing rc.xml doesn't sound like your cup of tea, " "you may want to use the GTK+ application to manage your themes and " "behaviours in Openbox. The application that you will use is called ObConf, " "and can be installed on your system just as easily as was Openbox itself." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre:caption):273 msgid "Installing ObConf" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre):273 #, no-wrap msgid "" "\n" "# emerge obconf\n" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):277 msgid "" "You can then open the configurator by typing obconf in your terminal. " "Next, you can go and add an entry for ObConf into your menu.xml " "so it will show up in your Openbox menu. If the \"editing the menu.xml file" "\" code listing above seemed too vague to be helpful, we'll use ObConf as an " "example of a menu entry:" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre):285 #, no-wrap msgid "" "\n" "<?xml version=\"1.0\" encoding=\"UTF-8\"?>\n" "<openbox_menu>\n" "<menu id=\"1\" label=\"Configuration\">\n" " <item label=\"OpenBox Config\">\n" " <action name=\"execute\"><execute>/usr/bin/obconf</execute></action>\n" " </item>\n" "</menu>\n" "</openbox_menu>\n" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):296 msgid "" "While ObConf is a great GUI tool for editing many behaviour-related settings " "for Openbox, it doesn't allow one to manipulate nearly as many settings as " "are presented in the rc.xml file itself. If you are having " "trouble finding a particular setting which you would like to change, please " "consult the Openbox " "Wiki for more information." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(note):305 msgid "" "In recent versions of Openbox (namely >3.4.7.2), one may experience a " "delay in the submenu opening. This setting was introduced into the rc.xml " "file, and is listed as <submenuShowDelay>100</submenuShowDelay>. " "Simply choose a lower number that suits your needs." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(title):315 msgid "Autostart configuration" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):318 msgid "" "As mentioned above, you don't see a whole lot when you issue the startx command for the first time after installing Openbox. In addition to " "customising your menus and changing the behaviour of the window manager, you " "will probably want to have some programs automatically start with your " "Openbox session. There is an easily-editable autostart.sh " "script that allows you to do just that. Just like with the menu.xml file, there are two different locations of the autostart.sh script--the system-wide (/etc/xdg/openbox/autostart.sh), " "and the user-defined (~/.config/openbox/autostart.sh)." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):330 msgid "" "In the default autostart.sh, you will notice a bunch of lines " "calling for programs like the gnome-settings-daemon, XDG, and others. These " "lines will generate errors upon logout if you don't have the programs " "installed and configured. The easiest thing to do when getting started with " "Openbox is to just comment out these lines by using the # symbol." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre:caption):337 msgid "Commenting out lines in autostart.sh" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre):337 #, no-wrap msgid "" "\n" "# Run XDG autostart things. By default don't run anything desktop-specific\n" "# DESKTOP_ENV=\"\"\n" "# if which /usr/lib/openbox/xdg-autostart >/dev/null; then\n" "# /usr/lib/openbox/xdg-autostart $DESKTOP_ENV\n" "# fi\n" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):345 msgid "" "In the above example, the comment symbol (#) was added before each line. The " "commenting method is preferred to just deleting the lines because you may " "want to add support for some of those startup items at a later time. Thus, " "leaving the default lines in place could ease that process." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):352 msgid "" "Adding your own programs to the autostart.sh script is as easy " "as writing in the program name for many applications. For instance, if you " "have Conky (a lightweight system monitor) installed, and want it to start " "automatically with your Openbox session, you simply add the following line " "to your autostart.sh:" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre:caption):361 msgid "Adding Conky to your autostart.sh" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre):361 #, no-wrap msgid "" "\n" "conky &\n" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):365 msgid "" "The ampersand (&) after the command allows that application to load up " "in the background. You will most likely want to load all the applications in " "your autostart.sh script in the background because doing so " "will let Openbox and other programs load without the previous one finishing." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(title):375 msgid "Configuring PolKit" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):378 msgid "" "Many applications depend on the PolKit authentication framework. You may need a PolKit " "agent, such as polkit-gnome, running in your Openbox session." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):385 msgid "First, install the agent:" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre:caption):389 msgid "Installing PolKit" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre):389 #, no-wrap msgid "" "\n" "# emerge polkit-gnome\n" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):393 msgid "" "Now configure PolKit to start automatically when you login to Openbox. Add " "the following line to ~/.config/openbox/autostart (for a single " "user) or /etc/xdg/openbox/autostart.sh (for all users):" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre:caption):399 msgid "Start PolKit automatically" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre):399 #, no-wrap msgid "" "\n" "sleep 1 && /usr/libexec/polkit-gnome-authentication-agent-1 &\n" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(title):406 msgid "Setting the background" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):409 msgid "" "Some things that you might take for granted in bigger desktop environments " "are not included by default in Openbox. One such thing is setting your " "desktop background. In order to place an image as your wallpaper, you will " "need to emerge a program like feh or nitrogen. feh is a simple image viewer that " "can also set the background, and it can easily be put into the " "autostart script. Once you have emerged feh, you can issue the " "following command to set the background:" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre:caption):421 #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre:caption):437 msgid "Using feh to set the background image" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre):421 #, no-wrap msgid "" "\n" "(feh has many other options instead of --bg-scale, \n" "which will scale the image to the screen dimensions.\n" "Consult the feh documentation.)\n" "$ feh --bg-scale /path/to/image.jpg\n" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):428 msgid "" "Once you have set the background manually, a file called .fehbg " "will be created in your home directory. This file simply contains the above " "command that you just entered in the terminal, and is automatically updated " "when you issue a different background command. Now, to set your background " "automatically upon login, you can add the following line to your " "autostart.sh script:" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre):437 #, no-wrap msgid "" "\n" "source $HOME/.fehbg &\n" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):441 msgid "" "If you don't particularly care for the idea of having to issue a command in " "the terminal in order to set your background, you can alternatively use " "nitrogen. It will allow you to set a folder for your background " "images, view thumbnails of those images, and fit, stretch, or tile them to " "your desktop." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):449 msgid "" "Installing nitrogen and getting it into your Openbox menu requires a " "few more steps than are readily apparent. First, you need to emerge " "nitrogen. Second, you need to run nitrogen with your backgrounds " "folder appended:" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre:caption):455 msgid "Starting nitrogen with your image folder" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre):455 #, no-wrap msgid "" "\n" "$ nitrogen /path/to/your/backgrounds/folder\n" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):459 msgid "" "Third, you can set your background image, but it will not be there after you " "logout. Just as with feh, you need to restore your background by " "editing your autostart.sh script to have the following line:" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre:caption):465 msgid "Restoring your background with nitrogen" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre):465 #, no-wrap msgid "" "\n" "nitrogen --restore &\n" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):469 msgid "" "This will cause nitrogen to load automatically when you start your Openbox " "session, and that can lead to a slightly slower load time than using feh." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(title):479 msgid "Programs to use with Openbox" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):483 msgid "" "The following is a list of some programs which you might want to use within " "your Openbox environment. While the list contains numerous terminal " "emulators, file managers, panels, and more, it should by no means be " "considered exhaustive. If none of the programs listed fit your needs, please " "check the appropriate categories in Portage for more options." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(title):494 msgid "Terminal emulators" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(li):498 msgid "" "LXterminal is the default terminal emulator for LXDE. It is very " "lightweight, and based on VTE. While EvilVTE offers many more customisation " "options (including transparency), LXterminal has a graphical interface for " "some of the more common options (font, colors, et cetera)." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(li):506 msgid "" "EvilVTE is an extremely lightweight terminal emulator based on (you guessed it) " "VTE. It supports tabs, multiple encodings, as well as an easy and extensible " "configuration file." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(li):513 msgid "" "Mrxvt " "is a multi-tabbed rxvt clone with XFT, transparent background and CJK " "support. It also features session support for each tab." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(li):518 msgid "" "Aterm " "supports transparency and backwards compatibility with rxvt. It was " "originally designed for the AfterStep window manager, but easily integrates " "with other environments." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(li):524 msgid "" "Eterm " "is a terminal based on vt102 and designed to be a more feature-rich " "replacement for xterm." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(li):529 msgid "" "Rxvt-" "unicode is a clone of rxvt that supports Unicode, daemons, embedded " "perl, and multiple fonts simultaneously." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(li):535 msgid "" "Terminal is the VTE-based default for the Xfce desktop environment, " "so it does require some Xfce libraries to run. However, it is still fairly " "speedy, and supports transparency and is easily customised." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(title):547 msgid "File managers" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(li):551 msgid "" "PCManFM is the lightweight filemanager from LXDE. It supports tabbed browsing, " "drag and drop, thumbnails for images, bookmarks, volume management, " "searching, and more. It also provides supports for managing the desktop " "background and drawing desktop icons (both optionally)." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(li):559 msgid "" "Thunar is the standard file manager from Xfce. It features a bulk renamer, " "user-customisable actions, and an extension framework, along with many " "optional plugins, such as media tag editing. It depends on several Xfce " "libraries, but it's still slimmed down compared to other file managers like " "Nautilus (from GNOME), and Konqueror (from KDE)." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(li):567 msgid "" "Nautilus is the powerful file manager from the GNOME desktop " "environment. It features volume management, thumbnails for images, " "searching, and some system configuration. As it depends on many of the GNOME " "libraries for proper function, it can seem a bit heavy compared to some of " "the other file managers." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(li):576 msgid "" "Gentoo (no relation to this glorious Linux distribution) is a two-pane style " "file manager. It is incredibly lightweight, but lacks a some features now " "prominent in modern file managers. It should definitely be considered for " "older hardware, or if you are wanting a barebones setup." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(li):583 msgid "" "emelFM2 is another file manager in the vein of Midnight Commander. It features " "a two-pane window. As with the Gentoo file manager (listed above), it is " "barebones and does not include many features prevalent in newer file " "managers. However, it also offers a few features not found in other file " "managers, such as a built-in commandline in a separate pane." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(title):597 msgid "Desktop management" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(li):601 msgid "" "Though PCManFM is mainly a file manager, it also gives you the option to " "manage the desktop background (instead of using feh or nitrogen) and draw desktop icons." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(li):608 msgid "" "iDesk " "is a simple program used to draw desktop icons. It supports shadowed and " "anti-aliased fonts, PNG images, \"snap-to-grid\" placement, and changing the " "desktop background." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(title):619 msgid "Panels" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(li):623 msgid "" "Tint2 is a simple, " "lightweight panel and taskbar. It supports color, transparency, a clock, " "drag and drop between virtual desktops, a system tray, and comes with a " "battery monitor. You can even add a button to display the applications menu " "from your window manager." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(li):630 msgid "" "PyPanel is an easily customised panel written in Python and C. It features " "transparency, shading, tinting, location and layout configuration, font " "type, autohiding, application launcher, clock, and more." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(li):637 msgid "" "LXPanel is the default panel and taskbar from LXDE. It features a launcher, " "menu, clock, and a GUI-based configurator. It is feature-rich while " "depending on very few packages, making it a good choice for a lean system." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(li):644 msgid "" "Xfce4-" "panel is the default panel from the Xfce desktop environment. It " "supports application launchers, detachable menus, a pager, tasklist, clock, " "applets, and more. It does, however, require a few of the Xfce libraries " "which are not dependencies of some other panels." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(li):652 msgid "" "FBpanel is a simple, extremely lightweight panel that supports window lists, " "launchers, a clock, and a few other goodies. It's not the most featureful " "panel, and it can be cumbersome to configure, but it needs only GTK+ to run." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(title):664 msgid "Pagers and systrays" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(li):668 msgid "" "NetWMpager is an EWMH-compliant pager that integrates nicely into " "any of the *box environments. It is not as obtrusive, and is much more " "readily customisable than many of the other available pagers." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(li):675 msgid "" "BBpager is a desktop pager that was originally written for BlackBox, but works " "nicely with Openbox as well. It does have some BlackBox dependencies though." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(li):681 msgid "" "Docker is the system tray that is made especially for Openbox. It has no extra " "dependencies, and gives you the ability to view and use tray icons for " "supported GTK and QT-based applications." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(li):688 msgid "" "Trayer is a system tray that was modified from the FBpanel code, and is often " "used with FVWM. One of its perks is that it supports transparency." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(title):698 msgid "Session management" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(li):702 msgid "" " " "LXsession is the stripped down session manager from LXDE. It is " "designed to remember applications that the user was running at the last " "logout, and to automatically restart those programs. It also supports the " "HAL daemon." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(li):709 msgid "" " " "Xfce4-session is the session manager from, you guessed it, Xfce. It is " "capable of saving several sessions, and provides methods for logging out, " "rebooting, and suspending your computer. It does, however, have many Xfce " "dependencies." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(title):721 msgid "Configuration tools" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(li):725 msgid "" "ObConf is a GUI application allowing you to customise the Openbox window " "manager without manually editing ~/.config/openbox/rc.conf." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(li):730 msgid "" "LXappearance is a GTK theme and icon configurator used with LXDE. " "It provides a nice graphical interface for setting the theme and icons, " "while depending on very few extra libraries." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(li):737 msgid "" "GTK-" "ChTheme is a simple application allowing for easier switching of GTK " "themes and your font. Currently, it does not allow for the switching of icon " "themes." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(li):743 msgid "" "GTK-theme-switch is another simple application that lets you change " "your GTK theme." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(title):753 msgid "Miscellaneous" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(li):757 msgid "" "Conky " "is a lightweight system monitor that can display over 250 objects, including " "date and time, CPU usage, memory usage, IMAP/POP3 email, top processes, " "hardware sensor data, and even info from your music player. It is highly " "customisable both in appearance and data display. We also have a Conky configuration guide available." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(li):765 msgid "" "Leafpad is a simple text editor. It is very lightweight, but " "includes features like codeset options, and the ability to undo/redo without " "limits." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(li):771 msgid "" "feh is " "a simple image viewer that runs from the terminal, but it also has many " "other features. It can display a slideshow of images, create an index print, " "dynamically zoom, and set the desktop background (detailed instructions " "above)." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(li):778 msgid "" "GPicView is a GUI-based image viewer. Though it has more " "dependencies than feh, it is incredibly quick to load and run." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(li):784 msgid "" "SLiM is " "the Simple Login Manager, which allows you to login to your Openbox session " "via a graphical interface instead of the terminal. It has very few " "dependencies, and supports many themes, but should not be used on machines " "that require remote logins." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(title):798 msgid "Openbox inside desktop environments" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(title):800 msgid "LXDE" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):803 msgid "" "If installing each component of a working environment sounds like a little " "too much customisation, but you still want the flexibility of " "Openbox, you may want to look into a desktop environment that uses Openbox " "as its default window manager. That environment is LXDE, the Lightweight X Desktop Environment. Designed to " "require even fewer system resources than Xfce, it is built around Openbox." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(title):815 msgid "Openbox inside GNOME" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):818 msgid "" "If you already have a GNOME environment installed, you may just want to " "replace the Metacity window manager with Openbox. Fortunately, this is quite " "a simple task! You will need to fire up your favourite editor, open your " "~/.xinitrc file, and put the following command inside it:" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre:caption):825 msgid "Adding an Openbox-GNOME session to your .xinitrc" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre):825 #, no-wrap msgid "" "\n" "exec openbox-gnome-session\n" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):829 msgid "" "If you use GDM or another graphical login manager, you will see a new " "\"GNOME/Openbox\" option in your session menu. You can simply select that " "option instead of manually editing your ~/.xinitrc." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(title):838 msgid "Openbox inside KDE" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):841 msgid "" "Say you have KDE installed and like it, but you want more flexibility with " "your window management than KWin offers. You can use Openbox as your window " "manager inside of KDE by simply editing your ~/.xinitrc file, " "and replacing your current exec command with the following:" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre:caption):848 msgid "Adding an Openbox-KDE session to your .xinitrc" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre):848 #, no-wrap msgid "" "\n" "exec openbox-kde-session\n" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):852 msgid "" "Now when you issue startx you will see KDE, but instead of KWin, you " "will have the customisability of the Openbox window manager." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):857 msgid "" "If you use KDM or another graphic login manager, you will see a new \"KDE/" "Openbox\" option in your session menu. You can simply select that option " "instead of manually editing your ~/.xinitrc." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(note):863 msgid "" "This method of using Openbox with KDE has been tested with the KDE 3.x " "releases. While it seems highly likely that it will work with the KDE 4.x " "series, it has not been thoroughly tested as of yet." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(title):872 msgid "Openbox inside Xfce" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):875 msgid "" "If you use Xfce4 and would like to replace xfwm4 with Openbox, you will need " "to go about it a little differently than with KDE or GNOME. First, you need " "to start your normal Xfce session, and open up a terminal. From the " "terminal, issue the following command:" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre:caption):882 msgid "Killing xfwm4 and replacing it with Openbox" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre):882 #, no-wrap msgid "" "\n" "$ killall xfwm4 ; openbox & exit\n" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):886 msgid "" "Second, you need to exit out of your Xfce session, and make sure to tick the " "checkbox that says \"Save session for future login.\" This will keep Openbox " "as your default window manager. Third, you will notice that you can't logout " "properly when using the default menu action. To fix this problem, open up " "your menu.xml, and locate this line:" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre:caption):894 msgid "Finding the exit action in menu.xml" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre):894 #, no-wrap msgid "" "\n" "<item label=\"Exit\">\n" " <action name=\"Exit\"/>\n" "</item>\n" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):900 msgid "Change it to this:" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre:caption):904 msgid "Replacing the exit action in menu.xml" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(pre):904 #, no-wrap msgid "" "\n" "<item label=\"Exit\">\n" " <action name=\"Execute\">\n" " <command>xfce4-session-logout</command>\n" " </action>\n" "</item>\n" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(note):912 msgid "" "With Xfce4, the root-menu provided by Xfdesktop will be used instead of the " "Openbox root-menu." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(title):922 msgid "Further documentation" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(title):924 msgid "External resources" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(p):927 msgid "" "While this document will easily take you through the inital installation and " "customisation of Openbox, it is by no means the only reference on the topic. " "There are several other resources that will aid you in creating your perfect " "Openbox setup. Some of them are listed below:" msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(li):935 msgid "" "On The Official Openbox website you " "will find more detailed information regarding theming, creating menus " "(including pipe menus), autostart scripting, and much more. This site also " "has information regarding new releases, upgrades, and instructions on how " "you can contribute to development." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(li):942 msgid "" "The Urukrama's " "Guide to Openbox blog contains a plethora of information about " "switching GTK+ themes, setting up keybindings, desktop effects, and other " "programs to use in conjunction with Openbox. Though the tutorial was " "originally written for use with Ubuntu, everything is applicable to Gentoo " "(and other Linux distributions for that matter)." msgstr "" #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(li):950 msgid "" "Box-Look provides numerous " "themes, icons, wallpapers, fonts, and tools to be used with Openbox (as well " "as the other *box window managers like Fluxbox, Blackbox, PekWM, etc.)" msgstr "" #. Place here names of translator, one per line. Format should be NAME; ROLE; E-MAIL #: ../../gentoo/xml/htdocs/doc/en//openbox.xml(None):0 msgid "translator-credits" msgstr ""