Just some nerdy console stuff. In truth in truth don't use cmus much on my desktop. It
And that looks more like my usual workflow. Switching between QtCreator, Telegram and Clementine-oh-god-what-a-song-give-me-some-lyrics.
Previously I used i3 with i3blocks. This is the first time I decided to take a look on polybar. So, if some polybar modules looks wierd maybe that's I just copy-pasted some from my i3blocks code :D
I used hardcode-Tray to change the icons and their colors to match the main theme. I used Papirus icons.
sudo -E hardcode-tray --size 24 --theme Papirus
hardcode-Tray
provides some means to change the colors via command line. I couldn't to that. I don't know why, but --color
option didn't work for me. In truth I didn't spend much time on that and just changed the color of SVG files with text editor. I have my Papirus icons located in /usr/share/icons/Papirus/24x24
.
I used gsimplecal to show nice calendar window when clicking on date.
Hahaha, I just had some fun :D
When it was time to decide how to display my workspaces it turned out I had a lot of fonts installed. Accidentialy I fount these cuties with gucharmap. It told me that's NotoEmoji Nerd Font Mono
is responsible for koalas and octopuses. This font can be found here among ton of other Nerd Fonts.
To adjust the colors of graphical applications I used oomox. I changed some colors of Numix theme. For example, Thunar now looks like this.
Welll, yeeeeah, maybe it's not the most complicated script ever but just a few lines of code buuut I oh goood how glad I was when this small script actually started to work and my songs started to switch and Clementine launched if it's closed! :D (I'm talking about something like .config/polybar/myScripts/clementine.sh
If no music my polybar displays just that.
By clicking on it opens Clementine. If any song is being played then it changes to something like that with working buttons (haha, sorry, I know clickable buttons is not a big deal but I was really glad when these buttons worked).
Just a very green photo by Cátia Matos.