NAME
X11::Protocol::Other -- miscellaneous X11::Protocol helpers
SYNOPSIS
use X11::Protocol::Other;
DESCRIPTION
This is some helper functions for X11::Protocol
.
EXPORTS
Nothing is exported by default, but the functions can be requested in usual Exporter
style,
use X11::Protocol::Other 'visual_is_dynamic';
if (visual_is_dynamic ($X, $visual_id)) {
...
}
Or just called with full package name
use X11::Protocol::Other;
if (X11::Protocol::Other::visual_is_dynamic ($X, $visual_id)) {
...
}
There's no :all
tag since this module is meant as a grab-bag of functions and to import as-yet unknown things would be asking for name clashes.
FUNCTIONS
Screen Finding
$number = root_to_screen ($X, $root)
$hashref = root_to_screen_info ($X, $root)
-
Return the screen number or screen info hash for a given root window.
$root
can be any XID integer on$X
. If it's not one of the root windows then the return isundef
. $number = default_colormap_to_screen ($X, $colormap)
$hashref = default_colormap_to_screen_info ($X, $colormap)
-
Return the screen number or screen info hash for a given default colormap.
$colormap
can be any XID integer on$X
. If it's not one of the screen default colormaps then the return isundef
.
Visuals
$bool = visual_is_dynamic ($X, $visual_id)
$bool = visual_class_is_dynamic ($X, $visual_class)
-
Return true if the given visual is dynamic, meaning colormap entries on it can be changed to change the colour of a given pixel value.
$visual_id
is one of the visual ID numbers, ie. one of the keys in$X->{'visuals'}
. Or$visual_class
is a VisualClass string like "PseudoColor" or corresponding integer such as 3.
Window Info
($width, $height) = window_size ($X, $window)
$visual_id = window_visual ($X, $window)
-
Return the size or visual ID of a given window.
$window
is an integer XID on$X
. If it's one of the root windows then the return values are from the screen info hash in$X
, otherwise the server is queried withGetGeometry
orGetWindowAttributes
.These functions are handy when there's a good chance
$window
might be a root window and therefore not need a server round trip.
Colour Parsing
($red16, $green16, $blue16) = hexstr_to_rgb($str)
-
Parse a given RGB colour string like "#FF00FF" into 16-bit red, green, blue components. The return values are always in the range 0 to 65535. The strings recognised are 1, 2, 3 or 4 digit hex.
#RGB #RRGGBB #RRRGGGBBB #RRRRGGGGBBBB
If
$str
is unrecognised then the return is an empty list, so for instancemy @rgb = hexstr_to_rgb($str) or die "Unrecognised colour: $str";
The digits of the 1, 2 and 3 forms are replicated as necessary to give a 16-bit range. For example 3-digit style "#321FFF000" gives return values 0x3213, 0xFFFF, 0. Or 1-digit "#F0F" is 0xFFFF, 0, 0xFFFF. Notice "F" expands to 0xFFFF so an "F", "FF" or "FFF" all mean full saturation the same as a 4-digit "FFFF".
Would it be worth recognising the Xcms style "rgb:RR/GG/BB"? Perhaps that's best left to full Xcms, or general colour conversion modules. The X11R6 X(7) man page describes the "rgb:" form, but just "#" is much more common.
SEE ALSO
X11::Protocol, X11::Protocol::GrabServer
Color::Library (many named colours), Convert::Color, Graphics::Color (Moose based) for more colour parsing
HOME PAGE
http://user42.tuxfamily.org/x11-protocol-other/index.html
LICENSE
Copyright 2010, 2011 Kevin Ryde
X11-Protocol-Other is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3, or (at your option) any later version.
X11-Protocol-Other is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with X11-Protocol-Other. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.