fluxbox-style(5)
================
Henrik Kinnunen <fluxgen@fluxbox.org>
v1.3.6, 03 January 2015
:man source:   fluxbox-style.txt
:man version:  {revision}
:man manual:   Fluxbox Manual

NAME
----
fluxbox-style - A comprehensive look at styles/themes for fluxbox(1).

SYNOPSIS
--------
This document describes various options available for fluxbox styles.

DESCRIPTION
-----------
What is a Style?

Styles, sometimes referred to as Themes, are a graphical overlay for the
fluxbox(1) window manager. If you wanted to get to know fluxbox, the styles
would be the 'look' of the 'look and feel'.

Styles are simple ASCII text files that tell fluxbox(1) how to generate the
appearance of different components of the window manager. The default
installation of fluxbox(1) is shipped with many classic examples that show a
great deal of what one could do. To use one of the standard styles navigate to
the 'System Styles' menu under your main fluxbox(1) menu.

fluxbox(1) uses its own graphics class to render its images on the fly. By
using styles you can determine, at a great level of configurability, what your
desktop will look like. Since fluxbox(1) was derived from blackbox many often
wonder if old themes will work on the latest releases of fluxbox(1). Well they
basically do, but you will have to tune them since the fluxbox(1) code has
changed quite a bit since the initial grab.

STRUCTURE
---------
A style is made up of a few major components which then have their own
sub-directives. The major components are as follows:

The 'window.\*' directives control the appearance of the window frames,
'window.tab.\*' controls the appearance of the window tabs, 'menu.\*' controls
the appearance of the popup menu that you see when you right click on the
desktop. 'toolbar.\*' is the bar you will see at the top or bottom of your
screen. Finally the 'slit.*' has options you can use to customize the
appearance of the slit. However if you don't set the slit directives
specifically, the slit's appearance is controlled by the toolbar
directives instead.

To understand how the style mechanism works, it is nice to know a little about
how X11 resources work. X11 resources consist of a key and a value. The key is
constructed of several smaller keys (sometimes referred to as children),
delimited by a period (.). Keys may also contain an asterisk (*)
to serve as a wildcard, which means that one line of text will match
several keys. This is useful for styles that are based on one or two
colors.

A more complete reference to this can be found in X(7), section 'RESOURCES'.

LOCATION
--------
There are many places to store your styles, the most common is in your
'~/.fluxbox/styles' directory. The initial installation will place the default
styles in '@pkgdatadir@/styles' providing a basic usable configuration.

When creating your own style, create a directory (normally the name of your
style) in '~/.fluxbox/styles/' (If the 'styles' directory doesn't exist,
create that also). While there isn't an official structure, it is
common to create a directory named after your style and place your
pixmaps directory (if required) in there along with a file called
theme.cfg (may also be named style.cfg). This file is where you will
construct your style using the components covered later in this manual
page. An example of steps taken when beginning a style project of your
own may look like:

    $ cd
    $ mkdir -p ~/.fluxbox/styles/YourStyle/pixmaps
    $ cd ~/.fluxbox/styles/YourStyle
    $ nano theme.cfg

Output of a packaged style should look like the following:

    $ cd
    $ tar -tjvf YourStyle.tar.bz2
     .fluxbox/styles/YourStyle/theme.cfg
     .fluxbox/styles/YourStyle/pixmaps
     .fluxbox/styles/YourStyle/pixmaps/stick.xpm
     ...

Of course, all of these are just preferences, fluxbox(1) allows for the
customization of many things, including how you handle your styles. Just
remember, however, that if you plan to distribute your style you may find
some community bickering if you don't follow practices. :)

CREATING YOUR STYLE
-------------------
As discussed above, fluxbox(1) allows you to configure its four main components:
the toolbar, menus, slit and window decorations. Remember that you can
customize the slit with its own directives, otherwise the slit will take the
appearance of the toolbar.

Here are some quick examples to illustrate basic syntax:

    toolbar.clock.color: green

This sets the color resource of the toolbar clock to 'green'. Another example:

    menu*color:     rgb:3/4/5

This sets the color resource of the menu and all of its 'children' to
`rgb:3/4/5'. (For a description of color names, see X(1).) So this one also
applies to 'menu.title.color' and 'menu.frame.color'. And with

    *font:  -b&h-lucida-medium-r-normal-*-*-140-*

you set the font resource for all keys to this font name all at once (For
information about the fonts installed on your system, you can use a
program like xfontsel(1), gtkfontsel, or xlsfonts(1).)

In the last example you will notice the wildcard (*) before font. In a Fluxbox
style you can set a value with a wildcard. The example means that every font
in the style will be what is specified. You can do this with any
component/value. For example if you wanted all of the text to be one color you
would do:

    *textColor:  rgb:3/4/5

This means that you can setup a very simple style with very few properties.
See the EXAMPLES below for an example of this in practice. fluxbox(1) also allows
you to override wildcards in your style. Lets take our example above and add
an override for the toolbar.clock.textColor component:

    *textColor: rgb:3/4/5
    toolbar.clock.textColor: rgb:255/0/0

With that all of the text will be 'rgb:3/4/5' except the toolbar clock text
which will be 'rgb:255/0/0'.

Now what makes fluxbox(1) so spectacular is its ability to render textures on the
fly. A texture is a fillpattern that you see on some styles. Texture
descriptions are specified directly to the key that they should apply to,
e.g.:

    toolbar.clock:  Raised Gradient Diagonal Bevel1
    toolbar.clock.color:    rgb:8/6/4
    toolbar.clock.colorTo:  rgb:4/3/2

Don't worry, we will explain what these mean. A texture description consists
of up to five fields, which are as follows:

.Flat | Raised | Sunken
gives the component either a flat, raised or sunken appearance.

.Gradient | Solid
tells fluxbox(1) to draw either a solid color or a gradient texture.

.Horizontal | Vertical | Diagonal | Crossdiagonal | Pipecross | Elliptic | Rectangle | Pyramid
Select one of these texture types. They only work when *Gradient* is specified.

.Interlaced
tells fluxbox(1) to interlace the texture (darken every other line). This option
is most commonly used with gradiented textures, but it also works in solid
textures.

.Bevel1 | Bevel2
tells fluxbox(1) which type of bevel to use. Bevel1 is the default bevel. The
shading is placed on the edge of the image. Bevel2 is an alternative. The
shading is placed one pixel in from the edge of the image.

Instead of a texture description, also the option *ParentRelative* is available,
which makes the component appear as a part of its parent, e.g. totally
transparent.

Or for even more possibilities Pixmap. If pixmap texture is specified (it
might not be necessary on every occasion) the pixmap file is specified
in a separate pixmap resource.

    toolbar.clock: pixmap
    toolbar.clock.pixmap: clock_background.xpm

This feature might need some investigation, reports say that sometimes the
resources color and colorTo must be set and then they may not be set.

All gradiented textures are composed of two color values: the 'color' and
'colorTo' resources. When *Interlaced* is used in *Solid* mode, the 'colorTo'
resource is used to find the interlacing color.

FONT EFFECTS
------------
In addition to specifying the font-family and the font-weight via the
supported font-rendering-engine (eg, Xft), fluxbox(1) supports some effects:
'halo' and 'shadow'. To set the shadow effect:

   menu.title.font: sans-8:bold
   menu.title.effect: shadow
   menu.title.shadow.color: green
   menu.title.shadow.x: 3
   menu.title.shadow.y: 3

To set the halo effect:

   menu.title.font: sans-8:bold
   menu.title.effect: halo
   menu.title.halo.color: green


FONT PROBLEMS
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
If you have problems installing fonts or getting them to work, you should read
the docs page at xfree.org. Here is a link to one of these:
http://xfree.org/4.3.0/fonts2.html#3[]

FULL COMPONENT LIST
-------------------
Here is the exhaustive component list for fluxbox(1) styles. Each one is listed
with their type of value required. Comments in a style file are preceded
with an exclamation point (!) which we also use here so that these can be
pasted into a new theme.cfg to be customized appropriately. Please note that
in order to keep styles consistent it is  often the practice of stylists
to provide all of the theme-items in their style file even if they are not
used. This allows the user the ease of changing different components.

WINDOW OPTIONS
--------------
Many, many things you can do with window design in fluxbox(1), below are your
options. Have fun.

   -----------------------------------------
   window.bevelWidth:              <integer>
   window.borderColor:             <color>
   window.borderWidth:             <integer>
   window.button.focus:            <texture type>
   window.button.focus.color:      <color>
   window.button.focus.colorTo:    <color>
   window.button.focus.picColor:   <color>
   window.button.focus.pixmap:     <filename>
   window.button.pressed: <texture type>
   window.button.pressed.color:    <color>
   window.button.pressed.colorTo:  <color>
   window.button.pressed.pixmap:   <filename>
   window.button.unfocus:          <texture type>
   window.button.unfocus.color:    <color>
   window.button.unfocus.colorTo:  <color>
   window.button.unfocus.picColor: <color>
   window.button.unfocus.pixmap:   <filename>
   window.close.pixmap:            <filename>
   window.close.pressed.pixmap:    <filename>
   window.close.unfocus.pixmap:    <filename>
   window.font:                    <font>
   window.frame.focusColor:        <color>
   window.frame.unfocusColor:      <color>
   window.grip.focus:              <texture type>
   window.grip.focus.color:        <color>
   window.grip.focus.colorTo:      <color>
   window.grip.focus.pixmap:       <filename>
   window.grip.unfocus:            <texture type>
   window.grip.unfocus.color:      <color>
   window.grip.unfocus.colorTo:    <color>
   window.grip.unfocus.pixmap:     <filename>
   window.handle.focus:            <texture type>
   window.handle.focus.color:      <color>
   window.handle.focus.colorTo:    <color>
   window.handle.focus.pixmap:     <filename>
   window.handle.unfocus:          <texture type>
   window.handle.unfocus.color:    <color>
   window.handle.unfocus.colorTo:  <color>
   window.handle.unfocus.pixmap:   <filename>
   window.handleWidth:             <integer>
   window.iconify.pixmap:          <filename>
   window.iconify.pressed.pixmap:  <filename>
   window.iconify.unfocus.pixmap:  <filename>
   window.justify:                 <{Left|Right|Center}>
   window.label.active:            <texture type>
   window.label.active.textColor:  <color>
   window.label.focus:             <texture type>
   window.label.focus.color:       <color>
   window.label.focus.colorTo:     <color>
   window.label.focus.pixmap:      <filename>
   window.label.unfocus:           <texture type>
   window.label.unfocus.color:     <color>
   window.label.unfocus.colorTo:   <color>
   window.label.unfocus.pixmap:    <filename>
   window.label.focus.textColor:   <color>
   window.label.unfocus.textColor: <color>
   window.maximize.pixmap:         <filename>
   window.maximize.pressed.pixmap: <filename>
   window.maximize.unfocus.pixmap: <filename>
   window.roundCorners:            <{Top|Bottom}{Left|Right}>
   window.shade.pixmap:            <filename>
   window.shade.pressed.pixmap:    <filename>
   window.shade.unfocus.pixmap:    <filename>
   window.stick.pixmap:            <filename>
   window.stick.pressed.pixmap:    <filename>
   window.stick.unfocus.pixmap:    <filename>
   window.stuck.pixmap:            <filename>
   window.stuck.unfocus.pixmap:    <filename>
   window.lhalf.pixmap:            <filename>
   window.lhalf.unfocus.pixmap:    <filename>
   window.rhalf.pixmap:            <filename>
   window.rhalf.unfocus.pixmap:    <filename>
   window.title.focus:             <texture type>
   window.title.focus.color:       <color>
   window.title.focus.colorTo:     <color>
   window.title.focus.pixmap:      <filename>
   window.title.height:            <integer>
   window.title.unfocus:           <texture type>
   window.title.unfocus.color:     <color>
   window.title.unfocus.colorTo:   <color>
   window.title.unfocus.pixmap:    <filename>
   -----------------------------------------

MENU OPTIONS
------------
Everything you need to make your menu look pretty.

   -----------------------------------------
   menu.bevelWidth:                <integer>
   menu.borderColor:               <color>
   menu.borderWidth:               <integer>
   menu.bullet:                    <{empty|square|triangle|diamond}>
   menu.bullet.position:           <{left|right}>
   menu.frame:                     <texture type>
   menu.frame.color:               <color>
   menu.frame.colorTo:             <color>
   menu.frame.disableColor:        <color>
   menu.frame.font:                <font>
   menu.frame.justify:             <{Left|Right|Center}>
   menu.frame.pixmap:              <filename>
   menu.frame.textColor:           <color>
   menu.hilite:                    <texture type>
   menu.hilite.color:              <color>
   menu.hilite.colorTo:            <color>
   menu.hilite.font:               <font>
   menu.hilite.justify:            <{left|center|right}>
   menu.hilite.pixmap:             <filename>
   menu.hilite.textColor:          <color>
   menu.itemHeight:                <integer>
   menu.title:                     <texture type>
   menu.title.color:               <color>
   menu.title.colorTo:             <color>
   menu.title.font:                <font>
   menu.title.pixmap:              <filename>
   menu.title.textColor:           <color>
   menu.title.justify:             <{Left|Right|Center}>
   menu.titleHeight:               <integer>
   menu.roundCorners:              <{Top|Bottom}{Left|Right}>
   menu.selected.pixmap:           <filename>
   menu.submenu.pixmap:            <filename>
   menu.unselected.pixmap:         <filename>
   -----------------------------------------

BACKGROUND
------------
Every style must specify the background option. If you don't want your style to
change the user's background, then use `background: none'. The options
`centered', `aspect', `tiled', and `fullscreen' require the `background.pixmap'
resource to contain a valid file name. The `random' option requires
`background.pixmap' to contain a valid directory name. For these options,
*fluxbox(1)* will call *fbsetbg(1)* to set the background. The options `gradient',
`solid', and `mod' all require `background.color' to be set. `gradient' and
`mod' both require `background.colorTo'. `mod' requires `background.modX' and
`background.modY' to be set as well. These options will be passed to
*fbsetroot(1)* to set the background. The special option `unset' is for use in
user overlay files only. It specifies that fbsetbg should never be run (by
default, even when `none' is set in the overlay, fluxbox will try to run
``fbsetbg -z'' to restore the last wallpaper).

   background: centered|aspect|tiled|fullscreen|random|solid|gradient <texture>|mod|none|unset
   background.pixmap: <file or directory>
   background.color: <color>
   background.colorTo: <color>
   background.modX: <integer>
   background.modY: <integer>

SLIT
----
Here are all of the options for the slit.

   -----------------------------------------
   slit: <texture type>
   slit.bevelWidth: <integer>
   slit.borderColor: <color>
   slit.borderWidth:               <integer>
   slit.color:                     <color>
   slit.colorTo:                   <color>
   slit.pixmap:                    <filename>
   -----------------------------------------

TOOLBAR OPTIONS
---------------
Below you will find all of the configuration possibilities for the toolbar.
The list is pretty extensive and offers you many options to make your toolbar
look just the way you want it.

   -----------------------------------------
   toolbar: <texture type>
   toolbar.bevelWidth:             <integer (0-255)>
   toolbar.borderColor:            <color>
   toolbar.borderWidth:            <integer>
   toolbar.button.scale:           <integer>
   toolbar.color:                  <color>
   toolbar.colorTo:                <color>
   toolbar.clock:                  <texture type>
   toolbar.clock.borderColor:      <color>
   toolbar.clock.borderWidth:      <integer>
   toolbar.clock.font:             <font>
   toolbar.clock.justify:          <{Left|Right|Center}>
   toolbar.clock.pixmap:           <filename>
   toolbar.clock.color:            <color>
   toolbar.clock.colorTo:          <color>
   toolbar.clock.textColor:        <color>
   toolbar.height:                 <integer>
   toolbar.iconbar.focused:        <texture type>
   toolbar.iconbar.focused.color:  <color>
   toolbar.iconbar.focused.colorTo:<color>
   toolbar.iconbar.focused.pixmap: <filename>
   toolbar.iconbar.unfocused:      <texture type>
   toolbar.iconbar.unfocused.color:  <color>
   toolbar.iconbar.unfocused.colorTo: <color>
   toolbar.iconbar.unfocused.pixmap: <filename>
   toolbar.iconbar.empty:          <texture type>
   toolbar.iconbar.empty.color:    <color>
   toolbar.iconbar.empty.colorTo:  <color>
   toolbar.iconbar.empty.pixmap:   <filename>
   toolbar.iconbar.focused.borderColor: <color>
   toolbar.iconbar.focused.borderWidth:    <integer>
   toolbar.iconbar.unfocused.borderColor: <color>
   toolbar.iconbar.unfocused.borderWidth:  <integer>
   toolbar.iconbar.borderColor:    <color>
   toolbar.iconbar.borderWidth:    <integer>
   toolbar.iconbar.focused.font:   <font>
   toolbar.iconbar.focused.justify:        <{Left|Right|Center}>
   toolbar.iconbar.focused.textColor: <color>
   toolbar.iconbar.unfocused.font: <font>
   toolbar.iconbar.unfocused.justify:      <{Left|Right|Center}>
   toolbar.iconbar.unfocused.textColor: <color>
   toolbar.pixmap:                 <filename>
   toolbar.shaped:                 <boolean>
   toolbar.workspace.font:         <font>
   toolbar.workspace.justify:      <{Left|Right|Center}>
   toolbar.workspace.textColor:    <color>
   toolbar.workspace:              <texture type>
   toolbar.workspace.borderColor:  <color>
   toolbar.workspace.borderWidth:  <integer>
   toolbar.workspace.color:        <color>
   toolbar.workspace.colorTo:      <color>
   toolbar.workspace.pixmap:       <filename>
   -----------------------------------------

EXAMPLES
--------
This list may seem intimidating, but remember, when you create your own style
you can easily set a majority of these keys with a single component. For an
example of this:

   -----------------------------------------
   *color: slategrey
   *colorTo:       darkslategrey
   *unfocus.color: darkslategrey
   *unfocus.colorTo:       black
   *textColor:     white
   *unfocus.textColor:     lightgrey
   *font:  lucidasans-10
   -----------------------------------------

This sets nice defaults for many components.

COLOR FORMATS
-------------
These are the color formats for styles:

   #000000 (Hexadecimal)
   rgb:<0-255>/<0-255>/<0-255>

See /usr/share/X11/rgb.txt for an explanation.

AUTHORS
-------
Blackbox was written and maintained by Brad Hughes <blackbox at alug.org>
and Jeff Raven <jraven at psu.edu>.

fluxbox(1) is written and maintained by Henrik Kinnunen <fluxgen at fluxbox.org>
with contributions and patches merged from many individuals around the world.

The Official fluxbox(1) website: http://www.fluxbox.org
You can find a lot of styles here: http://tenr.de/

This manpage was composed from various resources including the official
documentation, fluxbox(1) man page and numerous other resources by Curt
"Asenchi" Micol. If you notice any errors or problems with this page, please
contact him here: <asenchi at asenchi.com> and using the great contributions of
<grubert at users.sourceforge.net>.  Numerous other languages could be available
if someone jumps in.

SEE ALSO
--------
fluxbox(1) fbsetbg(1) fbsetroot(1)