]> The &amor; Handbook &Karl.Garrison; &Karl.Garrison.mail; 2001 &Karl.Garrison; &FDLNotice; 2003-09-16 2.2 &amor; is a small animation which sits on top of your active window. KDE tdetoys amor helper assistant Introduction What's &amor;? &amor; is an acronym which stands for Amusing Misuse of Resources. It is actually an animation which sits on top of your active window. In its default configuration, &amor; takes the form of a yellow spot which performs many tricks. &amor; also has many different themes which change the appearance and behavior of the animation. Since &amor; works with the &kde; window manager &twin;, the application will only work from within &kde;. It is possible that &amor; would work from within another &kde;-compliant window manager, but none are known to work at the time of this writing. Configuration Configuring &amor; To configure &amor;, click on the animation using your &RMB;. A menu will appear containing three items: Options..., About..., and Quit. Choose Options... to configure &amor; General Options The following settings for &amor; can be changed from the Options dialog: Theme This determines the appearance and behavior of &amor;. Themes are described in the next section. Offset This slider controls where the animation appears in relation to the top of the active window. The default middle setting will place the animation right above the window title bar, whereas setting the slider all the way to the top or bottom will result in the animation appearing a fair distance above or below the title bar, respectively. Setting this slider to a lower setting will allow the animation to be visible even when the active window is maximized. Always on top Checking this option will cause the animation to always appear in front of any existing windows on the screen, including the panel. Show random tips If checked, the animation will display various &kde;-related tips at random intervals. Allow application tips Any &kde; application can be designed to display helpful tips via &amor;. If this option is checked, and an appropriate application is the active window, the animation will display tips for that application. At the time of this writing, no &kde; applications make use of this functionality. &amor; Themes &amor; comes with many built-in themes, which change the appearance and behavior of the animation. In addition, it is possible to create new &amor; themes. The built-in themes for &amor; are described in the table below Available &amor; Themes Theme Description Multi-talented Spot This is the default theme for &amor;, and also the one with the most tricks. This theme was created by &Martin.R.Jones;. The jet-pack, beaming, and fire animations were contributed by MarkGrant. Spooky Ghost A ghost theme based-on the &kde; ghostview icon. Spooky Ghost was created by &Martin.R.Jones;. Crazy Eyes This theme consists of a moving pair of eyes, and was created by Jean-ClaudeDumas. Bonhomme A stick-figure animation, created by Jean-ClaudeDumas. Neko Neko is a cat theme by ChrisSpiegel. The graphics are originally from Oneko, which was written by MasayukiKoba. Oneko is a small application which features a cat chasing the mouse cursor. The application appears to no longer be maintained, but the source code from the last version is still available. Tux This theme features Tux, the &Linux; mascot. The actual graphics come from a Lemmings-style game called Pingus. The Tux theme was created by FrankPieczynski. Little Worm A small inchworm theme. Created by BartoszTrudnowski for his wife. Little Billy A static image taken from the game XBill . BSD Mascot A static image of Beastie, the FreeBSD daemon. Unanimated Tux An unanimated version of the Tux theme. Tao The Tao theme is an animated Yin Yang symbol. This theme was created by DanielPfeiffer occitan@esperanto.org, and was inspired by his Tai Chi practice.
Multi-talented Spot Spooky Ghost Crazy Eyes Bonhomme Neko Tux Little Worm Little Billy BSD Mascot Unanimated Tux Tao
Credits and License &amor; Program Copyright © 1999-2001 &Martin.R.Jones; &Martin.R.Jones.mail; Documentation Copyright © 2001 &Karl.Garrison; &Karl.Garrison.mail; &underFDL; &underGPL; &documentation.index;