For the second one, I guess you can edit /usr/bin/screenfetch to display what you want, but I don't know the exact commands
]]>-is there a way to launch screenfetch when terminal is being launched, when it starts
-is there a way to add something in order screenfetch to show also filesystem space and temperatures of cpu?
Could somebody help?
]]>I use Subtle, and since about when I installed lxappearance to change GTK and icon themes, my WM is shown as "not found" with Screenfetch. It may be not related to lxappearance but I do have this problem after using it... Before, subtle was fully detected without any problem If someone could help me, it would be nice
Thank you very much though, Screenfetch is still awesome
]]>kittykatt wrote:Fixed up -n and added -N.
-N will strip all colors and formatting from output.
Thanks. A *little* thing i noticed is that there is breakline after "GTK2 Theme" part (which is not present in default view):
djura-san@lab21-workstation OS: Debian unstable sid Kernel: i686 Linux 3.8-1-686-pae Uptime: 6m Uptime: 6m Shell: bash 4.2.45 Resolution: 1920x1080 WM: monsterwm GTK2 Theme: Shiki-Gray Icon Theme: gnome Font: Droid Sans Mono 8 CPU: Intel Celeron CPU 847 @ 1.1GHz RAM: 176MB / 1699MB
Hmmm...I must have no put in a check for GTK3 missing or not. I'll commit soon.
I don't use any info tools and I won't be using this, but I must say it looks really nice, with support for so many distros!
The front page screenshots look fabulous. Great work.
Thank you.
]]>The front page screenshots look fabulous. Great work.
]]>Fixed up -n and added -N.
-N will strip all colors and formatting from output.
Thanks. A *little* thing i noticed is that there is breakline after "GTK2 Theme" part (which is not present in default view):
djura-san@lab21-workstation
OS: Debian unstable sid
Kernel: i686 Linux 3.8-1-686-pae
Uptime: 6m
Uptime: 6m
Shell: bash 4.2.45
Resolution: 1920x1080
WM: monsterwm
GTK2 Theme: Shiki-Gray
Icon Theme: gnome
Font: Droid Sans Mono 8
CPU: Intel Celeron CPU 847 @ 1.1GHz
RAM: 176MB / 1699MB
-N will strip all colors and formatting from output.
]]>Hi there,
If you use screenfetch with "-n" flag, it will not display some info about machine. Example:─╼ screenfetch _,met$$$$$gg. djura-san@lab21-workstation ,g$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$P. OS: Debian 7.0 wheezy ,g$$P"" """Y$$.". Kernel: i686 Linux 3.2.0-4-686-pae ,$$P' `$$$. Uptime: 43m ',$$P ,ggs. `$$b: Packages: 706 `d$$' ,$P"' . $$$ Shell: bash 4.2.45 $$P d$' , $$P Resolution: 1920x1080 $$: $$. - ,d$$' WM: monsterwm $$\; Y$b._ _,d$P' GTK2 Theme: Shiki-Gray Y$$. `.`"Y$$$$P"' Icon Theme: gnome `$$b "-.__ Font: Droid Sans Mono 8 `Y$$ CPU: Intel Celeron CPU 847 @ 1.10GHz `Y$$. RAM: 185MB / 1699MB `$$b. `Y$$b. `"Y$b._ `""""
With "-n" flag we can see that some info about pc is missing:
─╼ screenfetch -n OS: Debian 7.0 wheezy Resolution: 1920x1080 WM: monsterwm GTK2 Theme: Shiki-Gray Icon Theme: gnome Font: Droid Sans Mono 8 CPU: Intel Celeron CPU 847 @ 1.10GHz RAM: 185MB / 1699MB
Is this bug or was it meant to look like this? I assumed that "-n" flag would remove ascii logo only and leave info fully displayed.
Actually, it just hasn't been fully refined. It's on my todo list to fix it all up.
]]>─╼ screenfetch
_,met$$$$$gg. djura-san@lab21-workstation
,g$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$P. OS: Debian 7.0 wheezy
,g$$P"" """Y$$.". Kernel: i686 Linux 3.2.0-4-686-pae
,$$P' `$$$. Uptime: 43m
',$$P ,ggs. `$$b: Packages: 706
`d$$' ,$P"' . $$$ Shell: bash 4.2.45
$$P d$' , $$P Resolution: 1920x1080
$$: $$. - ,d$$' WM: monsterwm
$$\; Y$b._ _,d$P' GTK2 Theme: Shiki-Gray
Y$$. `.`"Y$$$$P"' Icon Theme: gnome
`$$b "-.__ Font: Droid Sans Mono 8
`Y$$ CPU: Intel Celeron CPU 847 @ 1.10GHz
`Y$$. RAM: 185MB / 1699MB
`$$b.
`Y$$b.
`"Y$b._
`""""
With "-n" flag we can see that some info about pc is missing:
─╼ screenfetch -n
OS: Debian 7.0 wheezy
Resolution: 1920x1080
WM: monsterwm
GTK2 Theme: Shiki-Gray
Icon Theme: gnome
Font: Droid Sans Mono 8
CPU: Intel Celeron CPU 847 @ 1.10GHz
RAM: 185MB / 1699MB
Is this bug or was it meant to look like this? I assumed that "-n" flag would remove ascii logo only and leave info fully displayed.
]]>I never thought I'd see a project of mine make it into the official repositories. Pretty proud moment for me.
Anyways, I'll look through the last page of this thread which I have been neglecting for a while and look for any fixes posted.
]]>carnager@caprica ~ ↳ screenfetch
/usr/bin/screenfetch: line 2313: continue: only meaningful in a `for', `while', or `until' loop
]]>Anyway, to read the .cfg files that e uses, you can use eet. If E17 is the wm, eet will be available, so it's not a dependency for screenfetch-git but it's still good to check I suppose. To find the theme, use this on line 1064ff:
'E17'|'Enlightenment') if [ "$(which eet 2>/dev/null)" ]; then
econfig="$(eet -d $HOME/.e/e/config/standard/e.cfg config | awk '/value \"file\" string.*.edj/{ print $4 }')"
econfigend="${econfig##*/}"
Win_theme=${econfigend%.*}
fi;;
Sorry for silly question, but how can you change that pengiun logo to Arch one?
EDIT: modified /usr/bin/screenfetch and replaced ("Arch Linux") to the recognized OS.
screenfetch.sh -D MyDistro
Examples:
screenfetch.sh -D debian /* it shows debian logo */
screenfetch.sh -D archlinux /* it shows arch logo */
screenfetch.sh -D linux /* it shows tux logo */
p.s. screenfetch.sh is the name on my computer but it can be anything you want
]]>EDIT: modified /usr/bin/screenfetch and replaced ("Arch Linux") to the recognized OS.
]]>