This package contains a number of fonts which are useful for TV applications:
led-fixed
This is the big font which xawtv uses by default for the onscreen display
in fullscreen mode.
ets-teletext
This is a teletext font. It contains the block graphic characters used by
teletext pages. When watching teletext with the mtt teletext browser you'll
get much better results with these fonts installed.
ets-caption
A font for closed captions.
Gnocl implements a Tcl binding to the Gtk+ programming libraries for the rapid
development of graphical user interfaces. Designed to work with Tcl in a manner
consistent with the general syntax and command naming conventions of Tcl, Gnocl
provides a robust alternative to Tk for those developers which wish to develop
applications that seamlessly integrated into the Gnome desktop environment
without having to first familiarize themselves with the intricacies of the Gtk+
libraries and its dependencies.
Menu entries are often also available in toolbars or other widgets. And
sometimes, we want to enable or disable a given action, and this means having to
update everywhere this action is allowed.
This module helps managing actions in a Tk GUI: just create a new object,
associate some widgets and bindings with add_widget() and then de/activate the
whole action at once with enable() or disable().
Tk::FontDialog implements a font dialog widget.
The dialog is displayed by calling the Show method. The returned value
is either the selected font (if the dialog was closed with the Ok
button) or undef (otherwise). The exact type of the return value is
either a Tk::Font object (in Tk800) or a font name string (usually
something like font1). Both can be used as values in Tk -font options.
The Tile Widget Set is a next-generation re-implementation of many of the core
Tk widgets, along with the addition of several new widgets. With Tile, Tk
applications can achieve an appearance much closer to native platform widgets,
as well as take advantage of a modern, highly dynamic theme engine to produce a
wide variety of alternative user interface styles. Tile widgets complement the
existing Tk widgets, and Tile is currently being incorporated directly into Tk.
WMApp is a C++ based library for writing WindowMaker-style dockapps. To write
a dockapp, it is generally necessary to perform some magic Xlib incantations,
supply a clipping mask, and set up X event checking. Like larger graphics
libraries such as GTK+ and Qt, WMApp automates this process by providing the
classes and functions necessary for widget creation and callbacks. The library
provides numerous widgets, all with the traditional dockapp appearance. Many
common dockapps could already be rewritten to use this library.
echinus wm is a window manager for X11 supporting managing windows in
floating, tiled and maximized layouts.
All the configuration is made via config file in Xresources format.
So you don't need to recompile echinus every time you change something.
Echinus supports a small subset of EWMH to be compatible
with external panels and pagers.
It draws a border around windows and also an optional titlebar.
IPager is a X11 pager program that originally was developed for Fluxbox
but can also be used with other WM
Features:
* Various image zoom effects.
* Main window transparency.
* Transparent workspaces icons.
* Main window background color.
* Workspace icon: a defined color or transparent.
* Borders: can be applied to main window and to workspace icons.
* Switch workspaces: any mouse button upon your choice.
* You can send a window from one workspace to another.
* Application icons.
* Color themes.
This little program lets you change your Gtk+ 2.0 theme. The aim is to
make theme preview and selection as slick as possible. Themes installed
on the system are presented for selection and previewed on the fly. For
a comprehensive demonstration there's a large variety of widgets.
It was originally derived from Gtk Theme Switch, but what started out as
a hack to remove various nuisances now shares no code whatsoever anymore
with the original.
The Lumina Desktop Environment is a lightweight system interface that is
designed for use on any Unix-like operating system. It takes a
plugin-based approach, allowing the entire interface to be assembled or
arranged by each individual user as desired, with a system-wide default
layout which can be customized by the system administrator. This allows
every system (or user session) to be designed to maximize the individual
user's productivity.