Mmmh, you mean the little plugin that shows the current playlist in a menu to quickly change the current track? If that is, it is called xfce4-mpd-playlist-plugin atm (but this can change :)).
Oh! Maybe you mean the Shell script. It is coupled with another Shell script. OK, I'm in the way to put some scripts.
what does stick mode do? i just installed it and it's pretty nice! although, for some reason, i can't rename the tabs.. maybe i've got an older version or something?
mpc-new-track script is great!! thanks a lot!
ReplyDeletehow you considered putting it on:
http://mpd.wikia.com/wiki/Hacks?
Mmmh, you mean the little plugin that shows the current playlist in a menu to quickly change the current track? If that is, it is called xfce4-mpd-playlist-plugin atm (but this can change :)).
ReplyDeleteOh! Maybe you mean the Shell script. It is coupled with another Shell script. OK, I'm in the way to put some scripts.
what does stick mode do? i just installed it and it's pretty nice! although, for some reason, i can't rename the tabs.. maybe i've got an older version or something?
ReplyDeleteI am wondering the same.. 13 years later =D just curious because I don't see a difference if sticky mode is on or not.
DeleteLast version is 1.4. Get the focus inside the GtkEdit and press F2, or double click the tab.
ReplyDeleteCheers!
another question.. where is the text for each note stored? or, where is it read from?
ReplyDeleteIn version 1.4+ the notes are stored inside an RC file in ~/.config/xfce4/panel/notes.rc.
ReplyDeleteAny idea where are the Xfce4 notes texts in version 1.7.7? :)
ReplyDeleteAnd eight seconds later find -iname finds it: ~/.local/share/notes .
ReplyDeleteI always get a 'ghost' panel on close. Have to close the normal panel and than a small panel is left on the screen, which I have to close also.
ReplyDelete