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Diffstat (limited to 'docs/Irssi/UI/Theme.pod')
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diff --git a/docs/Irssi/UI/Theme.pod b/docs/Irssi/UI/Theme.pod deleted file mode 100644 index 344b5ae..0000000 --- a/docs/Irssi/UI/Theme.pod +++ /dev/null @@ -1,169 +0,0 @@ -__END__ - -=head1 NAME - -Irssi::UI::Theme - -=head1 FIELDS - -=head1 METHODS - -=head2 C<format_expand $theme, $format, $flags> - -C<$flags> is an optional bitmask of any of the following flags: - -=over - -=item C<EXPAND_FLAG_IGNORE_REPLACES> - -Any replacements specified in the theme are not applied to this expansion. - -=item C<EXPAND_FLAG_RECURSIVE_MASK> - -B<TODO: dunno> - -=item C<EXPAND_FLAG_IGNORE_EMPTY> - -If the format contains variables and no values are specified, an empty string is -returned instead of a partially filled template. - -=back - -B<TODO: What?> - -Example: - - my $formatted_str = Irssi::current_theme()->format_expand('{hilight Hello}'); - -B<NOTE: it seems that this only operates on abstract templates, not those -accessible with C</FORMAT>. Weird> - -=head2 C<get_format $theme, $module, $tag> - -Returns the unexpanded format template for the format name supplied in C<$tag>. - -Valid values for C<$module> are: - -=over - -=item C<fe-common/perl> - -=item C<fe-common/irc/dcc> - -=item C<fe-common/irc> - -=item C<fe-common/core> - -=item C<fe-common/irc/notifylist> - -=item C<fe-text> - -=back - -Example: - - my $pubmsg_format = Irssi::current_theme()->get_format('fe-common/core', 'pubmsg'); - -=head1 THEME DETAILS - -=head2 Loading and Testing - -You can change themes by issuing a C</SET theme F<theme-name>> command from Irssi. -Reloading is slightly harder, since Irssi will only reload and process a new theme -if the C<theme> variable I<changes>. - -You can force a reload of the theme (and everything else) with C</RELOAD>. This -reloads the configuration file too, so if you did any changes remember to C</SAVE> -first. - -B<Remember also that C</SAVE> overwrites the theme file with old data so keep -backups C<:)>> - -Better alternatives are the following aliases: - - /ALIAS THEMERELOAD SCRIPT EXEC Irssi::themes_reload(); - -or - - /ALIAS THEMERELOAD SET theme default; EVAL SET theme $theme - -The former is preferred if you have scripting support, whereas the latter will -work without scripting (Perl) support loaded, but requires that you are editing -a custom theme, rather than modifying F<default.theme>. - -=head2 TEMPLATES - -The actual mechanism used by Irssi to print text into the client involves a -certain amount of indirection, which allows themes to reformat messages in -various ways before they are displayed. - -The overall structure of these templates is based around 3 basic ideas: - -=over - -=item Nested Templates - -=item Colour Codes - -=item Variable Expansion - -=item Special Variables - -=back - -The real text formats that irssi uses are the ones you can find with -/FORMAT command. Back in the old days all the colors and texts were mixed -up in those formats, and it was really hard to change the colors since you -might have had to change them in tens of different places. So, then came -this templating system. - -Now the C</FORMAT>s don't have any colors in them, and they also have very -little other styling. Most of the stuff you need to change is in this -theme file. If you can't change something here, you can always go back -to change the /FORMATs directly, they're also saved in the F<*.theme> files. - -So, the templates. They're those C<{blahblah}> parts you see all over the -/FORMATs and here. Their usage is simply C<{name parameter1 parameter2}>. - -When irssi sees this kind of text, it goes to find C<name> from the abstracts -block below and sets C<parameter1> into C<$0> and C<parameter2> into C<$1> (you -can have more parameters of course). Templates can have sub-templates. Here's a -small example: - - /FORMAT format hello {colorify {underline world}} - - abstracts = { colorify = "%G$0-%n"; underline = "%U$0-%U"; } - -When irssi expands the templates in C<"format">, the final string would be: - - hello %G%Uworld%U%n - -ie. underlined bright green "world" text. and why C<$0->, why not C<$0>? C<$0> -would only mean the first parameter, C<$0-> means all the parameters. With -C<{underline hello world}> you'd really want to underline both of the words, not -just the hello (and world would actually be removed entirely). - -See also L<Formats#arguments|Formats/ALIAS AND FORMAT TEMPLATE ARGUMENTS> for -details on the variable to argument mapping. - -=head2 COLOURS - -You can find definitions for the colour format codes in L<Formats/COLOURS>. - -There's one difference here though. C<%n> format. Normally it means the default -color of the terminal (white mostly), but here it means the "reset color back to -the one it was in higher template". For example if there was C</FORMAT test -%g{foo}bar>, and C<foo = "%Y$0%n">, irssi would print yellow C<"foo"> (as set -with C<%Y>) but C<"bar"> would be green, which was set at the beginning before -the C<{foo}> template. If there wasn't the C<%g> at start, the normal behaviour -of C<%n> would occur. If you I<really> want to use the terminal's default color, -use C<%N>. - -=head1 AUTHOR - -Based on the original content found as comments in the F<default.theme> file. -Copyright E<copy> 2000-2010 L<The Irssi project|http://irssi.org>. - -Formatting and additional content by Tom Feist - L<shabble+irssi@metavore.org|mailto:shabble+irssi@metavore.org> - |