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XDaliClock(1)					    XDaliClock(1)

NAME
       xdaliclock - melting digital clock

SYNOPSIS
       xdaliclock [-toolkitoption ...] [-option ...]

DESCRIPTION
       The  xdaliclock	program	 displays a digital clock; when a
       digit changes, it ``melts'' into its new shape.

       This program was inspired by the Alto and  Macintosh  pro
       grams  of the same name, written by Steve Capps in 1983 or
       1984.

OPTIONS
       xdaliclock accepts all of the  standard	toolkit	 options,
       and also accepts the following options:

       -help   Print  a	 brief	summary of the allowed options on
	       the standard error output.

       -12     Use a twelve hour clock.

       -24     Use a twenty-four hour clock.

       -seconds
	       Update every second.

       -noseconds
	       Update once per minute; don't display  seconds  at
	       all.

       -cycle  Do color-cycling.

       -nocycle
	       Don't do color-cycling.

       -font fontname
	       Specifies  the  X font to use; xdaliclock can cor
	       rectly animate any font that contains all the dig
	       its plus colon and slash, and in which the letters
	       aren't excessively curly.

	       The xdaliclock program also contains four  builtin
	       bitmapped fonts, which are larger and more attrac
	       tive than the standard  X  fonts.   One	of  these
	       fonts  will  be	used if the -font option is given
	       one  of	 the   fontnames   BUILTIN0,	BUILTIN1,
	       BUILTIN2, or BUILTIN3.

       -builtin0
	       This is the same as specifying -font BUILTIN0.

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XDaliClock(1)					    XDaliClock(1)

       -builtin1
	       This is the same as specifying -font BUILTIN1.

       -builtin2 or -builtin
	       This is the same as specifying -font BUILTIN2.

       -builtin3
	       This is the same as specifying -font BUILTIN3.

       -fullscreen
	       Make  the  window  take up the whole screen.  When
	       -fullscreen is specified, the displayed time  will
	       wander around a little, to prevent any pixels from
	       being on continuously and causing  phosphor  burn-
	       in.

       -root   Display the clock on the root window instead of in
	       its own window.	 This  makes  the  digits  wander
	       around too.

       -visual visual
	       Specify which visual to use.  Legal values are:

	       default Use   the  screen's  default  visual  (the
		       visual of the root window.)  This  is  the
		       default.

	       best    Use  the	 visual	 which	supports the most
		       writable color cells.

	       class   One of StaticGray, StaticColor, TrueColor,
		       GrayScale,  PseudoColor,	 or  DirectColor.
		       Selects the deepest visual  of  the  given
		       class.

	       number  A  number  (decimal or hex) is interpreted
		       as a visual id number, as reported by  the
		       xdpyinfo(1)  program;  in this way you can
		       select a shallower visual if desired.

	       If you don't have a 24-bit system, using a  visual
	       other  than  the	 default  one  may cause colormap
	       flashing.

       -transparent
	       Causes the background of the window to  be  trans
	       parent, if possible.

	       If  the	server supports overlay planes, then they
	       will be used (this is the case  on  SGIs,  and  on
	       certain HP, DEC, and IBM systems.)

	       If  overlay  planes  are	 not  available,  but the
	       server supports the  Shape  extension,  then  that

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	       will  be	 used instead.	However, the Shape exten
	       sion is very inefficient: it  will  cause  your	X
	       server to use up a lot of cycles.

	       Also,  if  the  Shape  extension is used, you will
	       probably need to configure your window manager  to
	       not  put	 a  titlebar  on  the  XDaliClock window.
	       (This is the case at least with	twm,  tvtwm,  and
	       mwm.)   If you don't do this, then the window will
	       flicker constantly, as the window manager tries to
	       add and remove the titlebar ten times each second.

	       None of these problems occur if overlay planes are
	       used   (or  if  the  -transparent  option  is  not
	       requested.)

       -nontransparent
	       Don't make the window's background be transparent.
	       This is the default.

       -memory low
	       Use  high-bandwidth, low-memory mode.  If you have
	       a very fast connection between  the  machine  this
	       program	is running on and the X server it is dis
	       playing on, then xdaliclock can work correctly  by
	       simply  making  the drawing requests it needs when
	       it needs them.  This is the elegant method.   How
	       ever,  the amount of data necessary to animate the
	       display ends up being  a	 bit  over  10	kilobytes
	       worth of X Protocol per second.	On a fast machine
	       with a local display,  or  over	a  fast	 network,
	       that's almost negligible, but (for example) an NCD
	       X Terminal at 38.4 kbps can't keep  up.	 That  is
	       the reason for:

       -memory medium
	       Use  high-memory,  low-bandwidth	 mode.	 In  this
	       mode, xdaliclock precomputes most  of  the  frames
	       that it will ever need.	This is the sleazy copout
	       method.	The bandwidth  requirements  are  drasti
	       cally  reduced,	because	 instead  of  telling the
	       server what bits to draw where, it merely tells it
	       what  pixmaps to copy into the window.  Aside from
	       the fact that I consider this to be cheating,  the
	       only downside of this method is that those pixmaps
	       (about 170 of them, each the size of  one  charac
	       ter)  are  consuming server-memory.  This probably
	       isn't a very big	 deal,	unless	you're	using  an
	       exceptionally large font.

       -memory high
	       With  memory  set  to  high, the cache is twice as
	       large (the n -> n+2 transitions are cached as well
	       as  the	n  -> n+1 ones).  Even with memory set to

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XDaliClock(1)					    XDaliClock(1)

	       medium, this program can seem sluggish when  using
	       a  large	 font  over a very slow connection to the
	       display server.

       -countdown date
	       Instead of displaying the current time, display	a
	       countdown  to  the specified date (if the date has
	       already passed, count up from it.)  The	date  can
	       take  two  forms: either a time_t (an integer, the
	       number of seconds past "Jan 1 00:00:00 GMT 1970");
	       or,  a  string of the form "Mmm DD HH:MM:SS YYYY",
	       for example, "Jan 1 00:00:00 2000".   This  string
	       is interpreted in the local time zone.

       The  following  standard	 X Toolkit command line arguments
       are commonly used with xdaliclock:

       -display host:dpy
	       This option specifies the X server to contact.

       -geometry geometry
	       This option specifies the prefered size and  posi
	       tion of the clock window.

       -bg color
	       This  option  specifies	the  color to use for the
	       background  of  the  window.    The   default   is
	       ``white.''

       -fg color
	       This  option  specifies	the  color to use for the
	       foreground  of  the  window.    The   default   is
	       ``black.''

       -bd color
	       This  option  specifies	the  color to use for the
	       border of the window.  The default is the same  as
	       the foreground color.

       -rv     This option indicates that reverse video should be
	       simulated by swapping  the  foreground  and  back
	       ground colors.

       -bw number
	       This  option  specifies the width in pixels of the
	       border surrounding the window.

       -xrm resourcestring
	       This option specifies  a	 resource  string  to  be
	       used.

COMMANDS
       Clicking	 and  holding  any mouse button in the xdaliclock
       window will cause it to display the date while the  button

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       is held.

       Typing  ``space''  at  the  xdaliclock  window will toggle
       between a twelve hour and twenty-four hour display.

       Typing ``q'' or ``^C'' at the window quits.

       If  the	xdaliclock  window  is	iconified  or	otherwise
       unmapped, it will go to sleep until it is mapped again.

X RESOURCES
       xdaliclock  understands all of the core resource names and
       classes as well as:

       mode (class Mode)
	       Whether to display 12-hour or  24-hour  time.   If
	       12, this is the same as the -12 command line argu
	       ment; if 24, this is the same as -24.

       datemode (class DateMode)
	       Specifies how the date should be	 printed  when	a
	       mouse button is held down.  This may be one of the
	       strings mm/dd/yy,  dd/mm/yy,  yy/mm/dd,	yy/dd/mm,
	       mm/yy/dd,  or  dd/yy/mm.	 The default is mm/dd/yy.
	       If seconds are not being displayed, then only  the
	       first  four  digits  will ever be displayed (mm/dd
	       instead of mm/dd/yy, for example.)

       seconds (class Seconds)
	       Whether to display seconds.  If true, this is  the
	       same  as	 the  -seconds	command line argument; if
	       false, this is the same as -noseconds.

       cycle (class Cycle)
	       Whether to do color cycling.  If true, this is the
	       same  as	 the  -cycle  command  line  argument; if
	       false, this is the same as -nocycle.

       font (class Font)
	       The same as the -font  command  line  option:  the
	       font  to	 melt.	 If  this  is  one of the strings
	       BUILTIN0, BUILTIN1, BUILTIN2,  or  BUILTIN3,  then
	       one of the large builtin fonts will be used.  Oth
	       erwise, this must be the name of a valid X font.

       fullScreen (class FullScreen)
	       The same as the -fullscreen command-line option.

       root (class Root)
	       The same as the -root command-line option.

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XDaliClock(1)					    XDaliClock(1)

       visualID (class VisualID)
	       The same as the -visual command-line option.

       transparent (class Transparent)
	       Whether to make the window's background be  trans
	       parent, if possible.  If true, this is the same as
	       the -transparent command line argument; if  false,
	       this is the same as -nontransparent.

       memory (class Memory)
	       This must be high, medium, or low, the same as the
	       -memory command-line option.

       countdown (class Countdown)
	       Same as the -countdown command-line option.

ENVIRONMENT
       DISPLAY
	   to get the default host and display number.

       XENVIRONMENT
	   to get the name of a resource file that overrides  the
	   global  resources stored in the RESOURCE_MANAGER prop
	   erty.

       TZ  to get the current time zone.  If you  want	to  force
	   the	clock  to  display some other time zone, set this
	   variable before starting it.	 For example:

		 sh:   TZ=GMT0 xdaliclock
		csh:   ( setenv TZ PST8PDT ; xdaliclock )

	   You may notice that the  format  of	the  TZ	 variable
	   (which  is  used  by the C library ctime(3) and local
	   time(3) routines) is not actually documented anywhere.
	   The	fourth	character  (the	 digit) is the only thing
	   that really matters: it is the offset  in  hours  from
	   GMT.	  The  first  three  characters are ignored.  The
	   last three characters are used to flag  daylight  sav
	   ings	 time:	their  presence effectively adds 1 to the
	   zone offset.	 (I am not making this up...)

BUGS
       Other system load will sometimes cause the  second-display
       to  increment  by more than one second at a time, in order
       to remain synchronized to the current time.

       The -memory option is disgusting and shouldn't  be  neces
       sary,  but  I'm not clever enough to eliminate it.  It has
       been said that hacking  graphics	 in  X	is  like  finding
       sqrt(pi) with roman numerals.

       When  using a small font (less than 48x56 or so) it's pos
       sible that shipping a bitmap to the server would	 be  more

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XDaliClock(1)					    XDaliClock(1)

       efficient  than	sending a DrawSegments request (since the
       endpoints are specified using 16 bits each, when all  that
       we really need is 6 or 7 bits.)

       Support	for  the  Shared Memory Extension would be a good
       thing.

       It should display the day of the week somewhere.

       The color cycling should be less	 predictable;  it  should
       vary  saturation and intensity as well, and should be more
       careful that foreground and background contrast well.

       The correct default datemode should be extracted from  the
       current locale.

       Should have a -analog mode (maybe someday...)

UPGRADES
       The    latest	version	   can	 always	  be   found   at
       http://www.jwz.org/xdaliclock/

SEE ALSO
       X(1),   xrdb(1),	  xlsfonts(1),	 xclock(1),    dclock(1),
       oclock(1), tclock(1), xscreensaver(1)

COPYRIGHT
       Copyright    1991,  1992,  1993,	 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997,
       1998, 1999 by Jamie Zawinski.  Permission  to  use,  copy,
       modify,	distribute,  and sell this software and its docu
       mentation for any purpose is hereby granted  without  fee,
       provided	 that  the  above  copyright notice appear in all
       copies and that both that copyright notice and  this  per
       mission	notice	appear	in  supporting documentation.  No
       representations are made about  the  suitability	 of  this
       software	 for any purpose.  It is provided "as is" without
       express or implied warranty.

AUTHOR
       Jamie Zawinski <jwz@jwz.org>, 18-sep-91.

       Please let me know if  you  find	 any  bugs  or	make  any
       improvements.

       Thanks	to   Ephraim   Vishniac	 <ephraim@think.com>  for
       explaining the format of the bitmap resources in the  Mac
       intosh version of this, so that I could snarf them for the
       -builtin3 font.

       And thanks to Steve Capps for the really great idea.

X Version 11		    11-Nov-99				7

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