| Copyright | (c) Brent Yorgey, Wirt Wolff | 
|---|---|
| License | BSD-style (see LICENSE) | 
| Maintainer | <byorgey@gmail.com> | 
| Stability | unstable | 
| Portability | unportable | 
| Safe Haskell | None | 
| Language | Haskell98 | 
XMonad.Util.Loggers
Description
A collection of simple logger functions and formatting utilities
 which can be used in the ppExtras field of
 a pretty-printing status logger format. See XMonad.Hooks.DynamicLog
 for more information.
- type Logger = X (Maybe String)
- aumixVolume :: Logger
- battery :: Logger
- date :: String -> Logger
- loadAvg :: Logger
- maildirNew :: FilePath -> Logger
- maildirUnread :: FilePath -> Logger
- logCmd :: String -> Logger
- logFileCount :: FilePath -> (String -> Bool) -> Logger
- logCurrent :: Logger
- logLayout :: Logger
- logTitle :: Logger
- onLogger :: (String -> String) -> Logger -> Logger
- wrapL :: String -> String -> Logger -> Logger
- fixedWidthL :: Align -> String -> Int -> Logger -> Logger
- logSp :: Int -> Logger
- padL :: Logger -> Logger
- shortenL :: Int -> Logger -> Logger
- dzenColorL :: String -> String -> Logger -> Logger
- xmobarColorL :: String -> String -> Logger -> Logger
- (<$>) :: Functor f => (a -> b) -> f a -> f b
Usage
Use this module by importing it into your ~/.xmonad/xmonad.hs:
import XMonad.Util.Loggers
Then, add one or more loggers to the
 ppExtras field of your
 PP, possibly with extra formatting .
 For example:
  -- display load averages and a pithy quote along with xmonad status.
  , logHook = dynamicLogWithPP $ def {
                 ppExtras = [ padL loadAvg, logCmd "fortune -n 40 -s" ]
               }
  -- gives something like " 3.27 3.52 3.26 Drive defensively.  Buy a tank."See the formatting section below for another example using
 a where block to define some formatted loggers for a top-level
 myLogHook.
Loggers are named either for their function, as in battery,
 aumixVolume, and maildirNew, or are prefixed with "log" when
 making use of other functions or by analogy with the pp* functions.
 For example, the logger version of ppTitle
 is logTitle, and logFileCount loggerizes the result of file
 counting code.
Formatting utility names are generally as short as possible and
 carry the suffix "L". For example, the logger version of
 shorten is shortenL.
Of course, there is nothing really special about these so-called
 "loggers": they are just X (Maybe String) actions.  So you can
 use them anywhere you would use an X (Maybe String), not just
 with DynamicLog.
Additional loggers welcome!
System Loggers
Get the current volume with aumix. http://jpj.net/~trevor/aumix.html
Get the battery status (percent charge and charging/discharging
   status). This is an ugly hack and may not work for some people.
   At some point it would be nice to make this more general/have
   fewer dependencies (assumes /usr/bin/acpi and sed are installed.)
date :: String -> Logger Source
Get the current date and time, and format them via the
   given format string.  The format used is the same as that used
   by the C library function strftime; for example,
   date "%a %b %d" might display something like Tue Feb 19.
   For more information see something like
   http://www.cplusplus.com/reference/clibrary/ctime/strftime.html.
Get the load average.  This assumes that you have a
   utility called /usr/bin/uptime and that you have sed
   installed; these are fairly common on GNU/Linux systems but it
   would be nice to make this more general.
maildirNew :: FilePath -> Logger Source
Get a count of new mails in a maildir.
maildirUnread :: FilePath -> Logger Source
Get a count of unread mails in a maildir. For maildir format
 details, to write loggers for other classes of mail, see
 http://cr.yp.to/proto/maildir.html and logFileCount.
Arguments
| :: FilePath | directory in which to count files | 
| -> (String -> Bool) | predicate to match if file should be counted | 
| -> Logger | 
Get a count of filtered files in a directory.
 See maildirUnread and maildirNew source for usage examples.
XMonad Loggers
A very small sample of what you can log since you have access to X. For example you can loggerize the number of windows on each workspace, or titles on other workspaces, or the id of the previously focused workspace....
Get the name of the current workspace.
Formatting Utilities
Combine logger formatting functions to make your
 ppExtras more colorful and readable.
 (For convenience this module exports <$> to
 use instead of '.' or '$' in hard to read formatting lines.
 For example:
myLogHook = dynamicLogWithPP def {
    -- skipped
    , ppExtras = [lLoad, lTitle, logSp 3, wrapL "[" "]" $ date "%a %d %b"]
    , ppOrder = \(ws,l,_,xs) -> [l,ws] ++ xs
    }
  where
    -- lTitle = fixedWidthL AlignCenter "." 99 . dzenColorL "cornsilk3" "" . padL . shortenL 80 $ logTitle
    -- or something like:
    lTitle = fixedWidthL AlignCenter "." 99 <$> dzenColorL "cornsilk3" "" <$> padL . shortenL 80 $ logTitle
    lLoad = dzenColorL "#6A5ACD" "" . wrapL loadIcon "   " . padL $ loadAvg
    loadIcon = " ^i(/home/me/.dzen/icons/load.xbm)"Note: When applying shortenL or fixedWidthL to logger strings
 containing colors or other formatting commands, apply the formatting
 after the length adjustment, or include "invisible" characters
 in the length specification, e.g. in the above '^fg(cornsilk3)' and
 '^fg()' yields 19 invisible and 80 visible characters.
onLogger :: (String -> String) -> Logger -> Logger Source
Use a string formatting function to edit a Logger string.
 For example, to create a tag function to prefix or label loggers,
 as in 'tag: output', use:
tagL l = onLogger $ wrap (l ++ ": ") "" tagL "bat" battery tagL "load" loadAvg
If you already have a (String -> String) function you want to apply to a logger:
revL = onLogger trim
See formatting utility source code for more onLogger usage examples.
wrapL :: String -> String -> Logger -> Logger Source
Wrap a logger's output in delimiters, unless it is X (Nothing)
 or X (Just ""). Some examples:
wrapL " | " " | " (date "%a %d %b") -- ' | Tue 19 Feb | ' wrapL "bat: " "" battery -- ' bat: battery_logger_output'
Arguments
| :: Align | AlignCenter, AlignRight, or AlignLeft | 
| -> String | String to cycle to pad missing logger output | 
| -> Int | Fixed length to output (including invisible formatting characters) | 
| -> Logger | |
| -> Logger | 
Make a logger's output constant width by padding with the given string,
 even if the logger is X (Nothing) or X (Just ""). Useful to
 reduce visual noise as a title logger shrinks and grows, to use a fixed
 width for a logger that sometimes becomes Nothing, or even to create
 fancy spacers or character based art effects.
It fills missing logger output with a repeated character like ".", ":" or pattern, like " -.-". The cycling padding string is reversed on the left of the logger output. This is mainly useful with AlignCenter.
Create a "spacer" logger, e.g. logSp 3 -- loggerizes '   '.
 For more complex "spacers", use fixedWidthL with return Nothing.
padL :: Logger -> Logger Source
Pad a logger's output with a leading and trailing space, unless it
 is X (Nothing) or X (Just "").
dzenColorL :: String -> String -> Logger -> Logger Source
Color a logger's output with dzen foreground and background colors.
dzenColorL "green" "#2A4C3F" battery
xmobarColorL :: String -> String -> Logger -> Logger Source
Color a logger's output with xmobar foreground and background colors.
xmobarColorL "#6A5ACD" "gray6" loadAverage
(<$>) :: Functor f => (a -> b) -> f a -> f b infixl 4
An infix synonym for fmap.
Examples
Convert from a Maybe IntMaybe Stringshow:
>>>show <$> NothingNothing>>>show <$> Just 3Just "3"
Convert from an Either Int IntEither IntString using show:
>>>show <$> Left 17Left 17>>>show <$> Right 17Right "17"
Double each element of a list:
>>>(*2) <$> [1,2,3][2,4,6]
Apply even to the second element of a pair:
>>>even <$> (2,2)(2,True)