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1.TH XMENU 1
2.SH NAME
3xmenu \- menu utility for X
4.SH SYNOPSIS
5.B xmenu
6.RB [ \-irw ]
7.RB [ -p
8.IR position ]
9.RI [ title ]
10.SH DESCRIPTION
11.B xmenu
12is a menu for X,
13it reads a list of newline-separated items from stdin,
14shows a menu for the user to select one of the items,
15and outputs the item selected to stdout.
16.PP
17The options are as follows:
18.TP
19.B -i
20Disable icons.
21This makes xmenu loading faster when not using icons.
22.TP
23.BI -p " position"
24Set the position to spawn xmenu.
25Without this option, xmenu spawns next to the cursor.
26.I position
27is a string of the form
28.BR INTxINT[:MONITOR] ,
29where the first INT is the x position and the second INT is the y position.
30The monitor part between brackets is optional.
31.B MONITOR
32can be a number from 0 to the number of monitors minus 1;
33or it can be a string like
34.B current
35or
36.BR cursor .
37If present, the monitor specifies that the position is relative to the upper left corner
38of that monitor.
39If
40.B monitor
41is
42.B current
43or
44.BR cursor ,
45the monitor to be used is that where the cursor is in.
46For example,
47.B -p 0x0:cursor
48specifies that
49.B xmenu
50must spawn at the position 0x0 of the monitor where the cursor is in.
51And
52.B -p 100x500:0
53specifies that
54.B xmenu
55must spawn at the position 100x500 of the monitor 0.
56.TP
57.B -r
58If this option is set, the right mouse button is disabled;
59so pressing it will not trigger any menu item.
60.TP
61.B -w
62Asks the window manager to draw a border around the menus.
63This option may be buggy in some window managers,
64specially tiled ones that do not respect window hints.
65.TP
66\fB\-x\fP [\fImod\fP-]\fIbutton\fP
67This option requires an argument of the form
68\fImod\fP-\fIbutton\fP or \fIbutton\fP; where
69.I mod
70is
71.B Mod1
72to
73.BR Mod5 ,
74or
75.B Alt
76(equivalent to
77.BR Mod1 ),
78or
79.B Super
80(equivalent to
81.BR Mod4 );
82and
83.I button
84is the number of a mouse button.
85When this option is used,
86.B pmenu
87listens to button presses on the root window,
88and shows the pie menu when the given button is pressed,
89together with the given modifier,
90on the root window.
91For example, invoking
92.B pmenu
93with the option
94.B -x Super-3
95makes a menu open when clicking with the third mouse button on the root window,
96or when clicking with the third mouse button together with the Super (Mod4) modifier on any window.
97This option makes
98.B pmenu
99run continuously;
100so it should be used when
101.B pmenu
102is invoked in background on a X startup file (like
103.BR "~/.xinitrc" ).
104.TP
105\fB\-X\fP [\fImod\fP-]\fIbutton\fP
106Just like
107.BR \-x ,
108but also pass the click to the root window
109(for the window manager to use it, for example).
110This option is incompatible with
111.BR \-x .
112.PP
113Each item read from stdin has the following format:
114.IP
115.EX
116ITEM := [TABS] [[IMAGE TABS] LABEL [TABS OUTPUT]] NEWLINE
117.EE
118.PP
119That means that each item is composed by
120tabs, followed by an optional image specification, followed by tabs
121followed by a label, followed by more tabs, followed by an output,
122and ended by a newline. Brackets group optional elements.
123.IP
124The initial tabs indicate the menu hierarchy:
125items indented with a tab is shown in a submenu of the preceding item not indented.
126An item without initial tabs is a top-level item.
127.IP
128The image is a string of the form "IMG:/path/to/image.png".
129It specifies the path to a image file to be shown as icon at the left of the entry.
130If the path does not begin with "/", "./" or "../",
131the file is searched on the paths specified in the
132.B ICONPATH
133environment variable.
134.IP
135The label is the string that will be shown as a item in the menu.
136An item without label is considered a separator and is drawn as a thin line in the menu
137separating the item above from the item below.
138.IP
139The output is the string that will be output after selecting the item.
140If an item does not have an output, its label is used as its output.
141.IP
142The newline terminates the item specification.
143.PP
144If the argument
145.I title
146is given, the title of the menu window is set to it.
147.SH USAGE
148.B xmenu
149is controlled by the mouse,
150but can also be controlled by the keyboard.
151Items can be selected using the arrow keys,
152Tab (with and without Shift),
153Home, End,
154Enter and Esc, and 1-9 keys.
155Items can also be selected by typing the first several characters in it.
156.TP
157.BR Home
158Select the first item in the menu.
159.TP
160.BR End
161Select the last item in the menu.
162.TP
163.BR Down
164Cycle through the items in the regular direction.
165.TP
166.BR Tab
167Cycle through the items in the regular direction.
168When the type\-to\-select feature is active, cycle through matching items instead.
169.TP
170.BR Up
171Cycle through the items in the reverse direction.
172.TP
173.BR Shift-Tab
174Cycle through the items in the reverse direction.
175When the type\-to\-select feature is active, cycle through matching items instead.
176.TP
177.BR Right ", " Enter
178Select the highlighted item.
179.TP
180.B Left
181Go to the menu above.
182.TP
183.B Esc
184Go to the menu above or exit xmenu.
185.PP
186.B xmenu
187features the type\-to\-select selecting style,
188where typing a string will select the first item matching it.
189.PP
190Additional key bindings can be set at compile time by changing the
191.B config.h
192file.
193.SH RESOURCES
194.B
195xmenu
196understands the following X resources.
197.TP
198.B xmenu.font
199The font in which the labels should be drawn.
200Multiple fonts can be added as fallback fonts;
201they must be separated by a comma.
202.TP
203.B xmenu.background
204The background color of non-selected items in the menu.
205.TP
206.B xmenu.foreground
207The color of the label text of non-selected items in the menu.
208.TP
209.B xmenu.selbackground
210The background color of selected items in the menu.
211.TP
212.B xmenu.selforeground
213The color of the label text of selected items in the menu.
214.TP
215.B xmenu.border
216The color of the border around the menu.
217.TP
218.B xmenu.separator
219The color of the separator between items in the menu.
220.TP
221.B xmenu.gap
222The gap, in pixels, between the menus.
223.TP
224.B xmenu.width
225The minimum width, in pixels, of the items in the menu.
226.TP
227.B xmenu.height
228The size in pixels of the height of a single menu item.
229.TP
230.B xmenu.borderWidth
231The size in pixels of the border around the menu.
232.TP
233.B xmenu.separatorWidth
234The size in pixels of the item separator.
235.TP
236.B xmenu.alignment
237If set to
238.BR "\(dqleft\(dq" ,
239.BR "\(dqcenter\(dq" ,
240or
241.BR "\(dqright\(dq" ,
242text is aligned to the left, center, or right of the menu, respectively.
243By default, text is aligned to the left.
244.TP
245.B xmenu.maxItems
246Maximum number of items to be displayed in a menu.
247If more a menu has more than this number of items,
248they will be scrolled with arrow buttons.
249.SH ENVIRONMENT
250The following environment variables affect the execution of
251.BR pmenu .
252.TP
253.B DISPLAY
254The display to start
255.B pmenu
256on.
257.TP
258.B ICONPATH
259A colon-separated list of directories used to search for the location of image files.
260.SH EXAMPLES
261The following script illustrates the use of
262.BR xmenu .
263The output is redirected to
264.IR sh (1),
265creating a command to be run by the shell.
266.IP
267.EX
268#!/bin/sh
269
270xmenu <<EOF | sh &
271Applications
272 IMG:./web.png Web Browser firefox
273 IMG:./gimp.png Image editor gimp
274Terminal (xterm) xterm
275Terminal (urxvt) urxvt
276Terminal (st) st
277
278Shutdown poweroff
279Reboot reboot
280EOF
281.EE
282.PP
283For example, by selecting \(lqApplications\(rq, a new menu will appear.
284Selecting \(lqWeb Browser\(rq in the new menu opens firefox.
285.SH SEE ALSO
286.IR dmenu (1),
287.IR 9menu (1),
288.IR thingmenu (1)