table of contents
- NAME
- INTRODUCTION
- TABLE OF CONTENTS
- Lesson 1 - Get started
- Lesson 2 - Architecture
- Lesson 3 - Scripting with jgmenu
- Lesson 4 - Descriptions
- Lesson 5 - Icons
- Lesson 6 - Submenus
- Lesson 7 - XDG Application Menus
- Lesson 8 - Config Options
- Lesson 9 - Apprend/Prepend and Separators
- Lesson 10 - CSV generators
- Lesson 11 - Search
- AUTHORS
JGMENUTUTORIAL(7) | JGMENUTUTORIAL(7) |
NAME¶
jgmenututorial - A step-by-step tutorial to jgmenu
INTRODUCTION¶
This tutorial aims to explain the usage of jgmenu through a set of lessons.
TABLE OF CONTENTS¶
- •
- Lesson 1 - Get started
- •
- Lesson 2 - Architecture
- •
- Lesson 3 - Scripting with jgmenu
- •
- Lesson 4 - Descriptions
- •
- Lesson 5 - Icons
- •
- Lesson 6 - Submenus
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- Lesson 7 - XDG Application Menus
- •
- Lesson 8 - Config Options
- •
- Lesson 9 - Apprend/Prepend and Separators
- •
- Lesson 10 - CSV generators
- •
- Lesson 11 - Search
Lesson 1 - Get started¶
After installing jgmenu, start the menu by running the following command
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jgmenu_run
You should see a Linux/BSD system menu showing installed applications. See lesson 7 for further details.
Create a config file (~/.config/jgmenu/jgmenurc) by running
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jgmenu_run init
Full details of config options are covered in jgmenu(1) (jgmenu.1.html).
By entering the interactive mode and then selecting `t', you can try some pre-defined templates/themes.
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jgmenu_run init -i
There are a small number of configuration options which may need manual intervention in order for jgmenu to display correctly on your system.
- position_mode
- There are several methods for positioning the menu. Try fixed, ipc, center and pointer to see what works best on your system. See jgmenu(1) for full details.
- menu_margin_x and menu_margin_y
- If your are using position_mode=fixed, you may need to set these two variables. Depending on what window manager and panel you use, jgmenu may be able to automatically find a suitable vertical and horizontal position, so try without setting these variables first.
- menu_halign and menu_valign
- Again, depending on your system, you may need to manually specify horizontal and vertical alignment of the menu, but try without first.
Lesson 2 - Architecture¶
The design of jgmenu is very modular, providing a lot of flexibility in how it is used.
When jgmenu is started, two processes are run to produce the menu.
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┌────────────────┐ │ csv-generator │ └────────────────┘ | V ┌────────────────┐ │ graphical menu │ └────────────────┘
The first process (csv-generator) produces the menu content, whereas the second generates the graphical menu.
jgmenu_run(1) (jgmenu_run.1.html) is a multi-purpose wrapper script which does the following is pseudo code:
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if (jgmenu is already running) show menu else start a new instance of jgmenu
This makes it suitable for using with panels and keyboard shortcuts.
Lesson 3 - Scripting with jgmenu¶
From this point onwards, it is assumed that you understand basic shell usage including re-direction (e.g. <, >) and piping (e.g. |).
The syntax below (here-document) is used to denote the creation of a text file from whatever is between the EOFs. You can of course use your favourite text editor instead.
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cat >file <<EOF foo bar EOF
There are many ways to run jgmenu. In lesson 1, you saw jgmenu as a long-running application. As we go through the next few lessons we will run jgmenu as a short-lived applications. This means that it starts from scratch every time it is called.
So let's get back to basics. Try the following:
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echo >foo.txt <<EOF xterm firefox EOF
If you have not got used to the here-document syntax yet, it just means that you put the words “xterm” and “firefox” in a text file (which you can of course do using a text editor). Then run either of the following
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cat foo.txt | jgmenu --simple --icon-size=0 jgmenu --vsimple --csv-file="foo.txt"
The option --simple make jgmenu short-lived and reads menu items from stdin.
The option --icon-size=0, disables icons (i.e. it does not just display them at zero size, it simply does not load them)
The command line argument --vsimple is the same as --simple, but also disables icons and ignores jgmenurc (if it exists).
If you want a menu to be launched by a single script, you could construct it like this:
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cat <<EOF >menu.sh #!/bin/sh ( printf "foo\n" printf "bar\n" ) | jgmenu --vsimple EOF chmod +x menu.sh ./menu.sh
Lesson 4 - Descriptions¶
As you saw in the previous example, each line fed to stdin becomes a menu item. Any line containing two fields separated by a comma is parsed as description,command. Consider the following CSV menu data:
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Terminal,xterm File Manager,pcmanfm
This lets you give a more meaningful description to each menu item.
Lesson 5 - Icons¶
To display icons, you need to populate the third field. By default, jgmenu will obtain the icon theme from xsettings (if it is running) or tint2rc (if it exists). When running with the –simple argument, make sure that icon_theme is set to something sensible in your $HOME/.config/jgmenu/jgmenurc. Consider the following CSV menu data:
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Browser, firefox, firefox File manager, pcmanfm, system-file-manager Terminal, xterm, utilities-terminal Lock, i3lock -c 000000, system-lock-screen Exit to prompt, openbox --exit, system-log-out Reboot, systemctl -i reboot, system-reboot Poweroff, systemctl -i poweroff, system-shutdown
In the third field you can also specify the full path if you wish.
Lesson 6 - Submenus¶
So far we have looked at producing a single “root” menu only. jgmenu understands a small amount of markup and enables submenus by ^tag() and ^checkout(). Try this:
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Terminal,xterm File Manager,pcmanfm Settings,^checkout(settings) ^tag(settings) Set Background Image,nitrogen
In pseudo-code, build your CSV file as follows:
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# the root-menu item0.0 item0.1 sub1,^checkout(1) sub2,^checkout(2) # the first sub-menu ^tag(1) item1.0 item1.1 # the second sub-menu ^tag(2) item2.0 item2.1
^root() can be used instead of ^checkout() in order to open the submenu in the parent window.
Lesson 7 - XDG Application Menus¶
XDG (freedesktop.org) have defined a Linux/BSD Desktop Menu Specification which is followed by the big Desktop Environments. See menu-spec (http://specifications.freedesktop.org/menu-spec/latest/) for further details. In brief, there are three types of files which define an XDG menu:
- .menu
- XML file describing menu categories and directory structure. Located in /etc/xdg/menus/, or XDG_CONFIG_{HOME,DIRS} equivalent.
- .directory
- Describe menu directories. Located in /usr/share/desktop-directories/, or XDG_DATA_{HOME,DIRS} equivalent.
- .desktop
- Describe applications and contain most of the information needed to build a menu (e.g. Name, Exec command, Icon and Category) Located in /usr/share/applications/, or XDG_DATA_{HOME,DIRS} equivalent.
Most desktop applications provided their own associated .desktop files, whereas .menu and .directory files are supplied by menu packages, such as libmenu-cache (LXDE) and libcargon (XFCE).
The jgmenu core module jgmenu-apps(1) (jgmenu-apps.1.html) provides a system menu based on .desktop files and built-in schema data or a specified schema file, rather than system .menu and .directory files. Whilst this deviates from XDG menu spec, it is much simpler to understand and tweak. It also avoids reliance on menu packages.
For strict XDG compliance, the optional module jgmenu-lx(1) (jgmenu-lx.1.html) can be used.
See Lesson 10 for generic instructions on modules.
Lesson 8 - Config Options¶
In lesson 1 we discussed config options position_mode, menu_margin_x, menu_margin_y, menu_halign and menu_valign.
Here follow a few more options you may wish to explore. For full details, see jgmenu(1) (jgmenu.1.html).
Rofi style:
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csv_no_dirs=1 csv_single_window=1 columns=2 menu_width=600 menu_valign=center menu_halign=center
Synchronize colours, font and icons with tint2 panel
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tint2_look=1
Lesson 9 - Apprend/Prepend and Separators¶
When using apps, pmenu or lx, you can add menu items to the top and bottom of the root menu by editing append.csv and/or prepend.csv in ~/.config/jgmenu. For example, try the following:
prepend.csv
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Browser, firefox, firefox File manager, pcmanfm, system-file-manager Terminal, xterm, utilities-terminal ^sep()
append.csv
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^sep() Suspend, systemctl -i suspend, system-log-out Reboot, systemctl -i reboot, system-reboot Poweroff, systemctl -i poweroff, system-shutdown
In these example we have used the markup ^sep(), which inserts a horizontal separator line. Similarly, ^sep(foo) inserts a text separator displaying “foo”
Lesson 10 - CSV generators¶
In previous lessons, we introduced the apps, lx and pmenu. These modules are referred to as “CSV generators” and are invoked as follows:
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jgmenu_run <command>
Built-in “CSV generators” include: apps and ob
Optional “CSV generators” include: lx and pmenu
They are documented by a man page or a simple –help message.
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man jgmenu-<command> jgmenu_run <command> --help
Here follow some examples of how they can be used.
Specify CSV generator in the config file by setting csv_cmd in ~/.config/jgmenu/jgmenurc
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csv_cmd = pmenu
Specify CSV generator on the command line
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jgmenu --csv-cmd="jgmenu_run pmenu"
Pipe the CSV output to jgmenu (using --simple to read from stdin)
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jgmenu_run pmenu | jgmenu --simple
Create a pipemenu using ^pipe() markup. Consider this example
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Terminal,xterm File Manager,pcmanfm ^pipe(jgmenu_run pmenu)
Lesson 11 - Search¶
jgmenu has search support, which can be invoked by just typing when the menu is open.
A search box can be inserted using widgets. For example, add this to ~/.config/jgmenu/prepend.csv:
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@search,,3,3,150,20,2,left,top,auto,#000000 0,Type to Search
Make sure you adjust menu padding accordingly, for example
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menu_padding_top=24
A search can also be invoked by associating a widget with a ^filter() command.
AUTHORS¶
Johan Malm.
21 February, 2020 |