Logo by McFly (anonymous IP: 18.116.14.48,0) | ||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||
Audio (343) Datatype (51) Demo (203) Development (602) Document (24) Driver (97) Emulation (149) Game (1011) Graphics (500) Library (118) Network (234) Office (66) Utility (932) Video (69) Total files: 4399 Full index file Recent index file
 Amigans.net  OpenAmiga  Aminet  UtilityBase  IntuitionBase  AmigaBounty
Support the site
|
[Show comments] [Show snapshots] [Show videos] [Show content] [Show crashlogs] AmiSnap is a simple program to iconify any intuition window on the workbench. *** New in 1.4: Fading effect! *** USAGE Double-click its icon or start it from the Shell, hold down the left ALT key and press the left mouse button over a window. The window under the mouse pointer will be iconfied. The ToolTypes and Shell Template are the same: SNAPKEY,ACTIVEWIN/S,FXTYPE/K,FXSPEED/K/N,ICON/K,ICONMAXCHARS/K/N,CX_PRIORITY/K/N SNAPKEY: By default, the snapkey is "RAWMOUSE LALT LBUTTON MOUSE_LEFTPRESS", or in other words, the left Alt key and left mouse button. It can be changed by specifying another sequence using the same syntax as FKey. ACTIVEWIN: By default, the window under the mouse pointer gets iconified. It's fine with the default snapkey but can be impractical when using keyboard-only snapkey sequences. This switch changes AmiSnap's behavior so that the currently active window can be iconified instead. FXTYPE: By default no effect is used, the window is iconified immediately. Possible choices are "None", "Zoom", and "Fade" (case-insensitive). "Zoom" makes the window shrink down to nothing. "Fade" makes the window fade away and requires OS4.1 with the Compositing option enabled in Prefs/GUI. FXSPEED: By default the effects use a speed of 70, which is fast but not too fast. For the Zoom the useful range is 1..150, 0 disables the effect, 1 is really slow taking from 4 to 30 seconds depending on the window size and 150 is so fast that the effect is hard to notice. For the Fade the useful range is 1..100, where 1 is slow (1 second) and 100 is almost too fast to see (10 millisecond). If the value is outside of that range it uses the default of 70 (30ms). ICON: By default, the icon image from ENV(ARC):Sys/Def_Iconify.info is used for the workbench AppIcons. This argument lets you pick a different icon. Note that the icon name should be provided without the .info extension, like "RAM:Disk", and you might want to unsnapshot your custom icon or the first window you iconify will have its AppIcon appear at the snapshot X/Y position if no other icon is near. MAXCHARS: When a window is iconified, the AppIcon displayed on the workbench is named after the title of the iconified window. By default, titles up to 32 characters are displayed in full. If the title is longer the string is truncated at 29 chars and "..." is appended to it. There's no upper limit, however values lesser than 4 are ignored. CX_PRIORITY: This argument lets you alter the input event priority of the commodity. By default it is set to 0 and can be set from -128 to 127. Should you have another program which uses the same key sequence as AmiSnap, the one with the higher priority will receive the input events (snapkey). Setting it to 1 or -1 usually is enough to control who gets the input, but in case of doubt, use Scout to find out what value other commodities are using. EXAMPLES To iconify windows without any effect by holding the middle mouse button and clicking with the left mouse button: 'Amisnap "RAWMOUSE MBUTTON LBUTTON MOUSE_LEFTPRESS"' To use Control+Escape to iconify the active window without clicking on it, with Fade effect, using the AmiSnap icon with names up to 8 chars, and a higher priority, from the Shell: 'Amisnap "CTRL ESC" ACTIVEWIN FXTYPE=Fade ICON="PROGDIR:AmiSnap" MAXCHARS=8 CX_PRIORITY=1' The program can be aborted at any time by sending CTRL-C to it or by launching it a second time from another Shell or its icon. To achieve the same using the icon tooltypes: SNAPKEY=CTRL ESC (no "double-quotes" around the snapkey string) ACTIVEWIN FXTYPE=Fade ICON=PROGDIR:AmiSnap (no "double-quotes" around path) MAXCHARS=8 CX_PRIORITY=1 When launched from its icon, the Commodity can be removed by launching it a second time or by using the "Remove" button in Exchange. Oh yes, use of this program is at your own risc ;) HISTORY AmiSnap 1.4 (25.11.2008) - Added new Shell argument and matching ToolType: FXTYPE to allow selecting Fade instead of Zoom (Fade is ignored on system with OS4.0) - Made the FXSPEED argument control both effects. AmiSnap 1.3 (14.02.2007) Alex Carmona - Added new Shell arguments and matching ToolTypes: ICON to specify a different AppIcon MAXCHARS to limit the size of the AppIcon name FXSPEED to control the speed of the effect - Removed the NOEFFECT switch as FXSPEED=0 does the same. AmiSnap 1.2 (13.02.2007) Alex Carmona - Accepts tooltypes now so it can be launched from Workbench - Added new Shell arguments and matching ToolTypes: ACTIVEWIN to ignore the mouse position and iconify the active window NOEFFECT to disable the zoom effect CX_PRIORITY to change the priority of the CX input stream - Icon name is now truncated if the window title is longer than 31 chars. This is indicated by trailing dots like "This is a very long window t..." - Improved Commodity handling, now quits when launched twice - Windows are now active when restored - Fixed some bugs with the snapkey string parsing AmiSnap 1.1 (23.11.2005) Alex Carmona - Enabled and fine-tuned the Zoom feature - Added version string - Updated Commodity description AmiSnap 1.0 (18.03.2005) - AmigaOS4 port by Stephan Rupprecht (amigaos()stephan-rupprecht.de) AmiSnip 0.0 beta - Original Code (C) 2002 THOR, Thomas Richter TODO - Add zoom-in effect on de-iconification - Add option to put icon on Dock instead of WB DONE - Add wbstartup code - Add tooltypes support to define the hotkey and toggle the effect. - Shorten long window titles used for the icon name - Improve ReadArgs handling - Add fade-out/fade-in effect
|
Copyright (c) 2004-2024 by Björn Hagström All Rights Reserved Amiga OS and its logos are registered trademarks of Hyperion Entertainment |