In a theme file, it is now possible to provide an array of "color
definitions", which allow you to use names instead of colors throughout
the theme file.
Currently, only the colorset "wal" is supported, which reads all colors
from the wal JSON file (~/.cache/wal/colors.json) and makes them usable
in the theme (as "foreground", "background", "cursor", "color12", etc.).
An example of this can be found in the theme wal-powerline.
see #185
In order to do that, change the theme engine so that a theme can
override settings in the iconsets. Was probably a bug to begin with that
this was not possible.
The moon icon seems to make more sense for night time.
Add a datetime icon so you get a clock when using datetime.
Change the CPU icon to the microchip character.
The current thermometer icon isn't actually included in fontawesome, requiring a user to install and find another font that does support it, such as symbola or nota-emoji
Since this is for font-awesome it would make sense to only require font-awesome.
Set the minimum width for uplink and downlink widgets to "down 1000MB",
which should be plenty, and change alignment to right (personally, I
find this looks nicer).
To not have the icons on the left side "jump around" depending on the
value, make them suffixes.
If this solution is not sufficient, alternatively, the widget itself
could perform value padding. In that case, the whole alignment and
min-width settings would be obsolete and the icons could remain on the
left side.
* use psutil instead of "ifconfig" in order to avoid external command
calls
* fix a small bug in the ascii theme (missing colon)
* show statistics per-nic
If the computer runs on AC, display that instead of showing "100%" in
the status.
Also, if reading the charging status fails for some reason (except the
computer being on AC), go into critical state and display "n/a".
see #23
Each widget can now return a state using the method "state()". This
string is then used to look up a theme information which is used instead
of the default or module theme, if found.
see #23
Add customized separators:
* The default separators are automatically disabled if custom separators
are used (to "just" disable the default, use empty custom separators)
* Use previous background color as their background color and the
current background color as foreground color
* Allow the separator-block-width to be configured
see #23