# Writing a bumblebee-status module ## Introduction Adding a new module to `bumblebee-status` is straight-forward: - Add a new Python module in `modules/contrib/`. The name of the module will be the name that the user needs to specify when invoking `bumblebee-status` (i.e. a module called `modules/contrib/test.py` will be loaded using `bumblebee-status -m test`) - See below for how to actually write the module - Test (run `bumblebee-status` in the CLI) - Make sure your changes don't break anything: `./coverage.sh` - If you want to do me favour, run your module through `black -t py34` before submitting ## Pull requests The project **gladly** accepts PRs for bugfixes, new functionality, new modules, etc. When you feel comfortable with what you've developed, please just open a PR, somebody will look at it eventually :) Thanks! ## Coding guidelines I'm pretty open to whatever style you use, but if it's all the same to you (and yes, I know that the current codebase is only slowly adapting to this): - Please favour single quotes for strings (except for docstrings, which are always """) - For private methods/variables, please use a leading `__` (e.g. `__output` rather than `_output`) ## Hello world This example will show "hello world" in the status bar: ```python """Short description""" import core.module import core.widget class Module(core.module.Module): def __init__(self, config): super().__init__(config, core.widget.Widget(self.full_text)) def full_text(self, widgets): return 'hello world' # vim: tabstop=8 expandtab shiftwidth=4 softtabstop=4 ``` ## Of modules and widgets There are two important concepts for module writers: - A module is something that offers a single set of coherent functionality - A module has 1 to n "widgets", which translates to individual blocks in the i3bar Very often, this is a 1:1 relationship, and a single module has a single widget. If that's the case for you, you can stop reading now :) Otherwise, you have a number of ways to handle widgets: - During the `super().init__(...)` inside the module's constructor, you can specify a **list** of widgets, and those will comprise the widgets (in ordered fashion) - During runtime, you can set a new list of widgets by using the `self.widgets()` method of the module ## Adding widgets at runtime If you want to add widgets during runtime, please use the `add_widget()` method of the module: ``` def do_something(self): self.add_widget(full_text="my sample text", name="") ``` TODO: expand on this ## Periodic updates `bumblebee-status` modules have two different ways to update their data: 1. Each interval, the callback registered when the widget was created is called. You can do arbitrarily complex things there 2. Each interval, **before** the widget's callback is invoked, a generic `update(self, widgets)` method is called on the **module** Largely, where you want to put your update code is up to you. My observations: - If you want to change the widgets a module has, you **have** to stick with `update()` - For simple modules, doing the data update in the widget callback is simplest (see `kernel`, for example) ## Advanced topics ### Event handlers The `core.input` module can be used to execute callbacks during mouse events: ```python import core.module import core.widget import core.input class Module(core.module.Module): @core.decorators.every(minutes=60, seconds=20) def __init__(self, config): super().__init__(config=config, widgets=) core.input.register(widget, button=core.input.LEFT_MOUSE, cmd=) ``` The command can be either a CLI tool that will be directly executed (e.g. `cmd='shutdown -h now'`) or a method that will be executed. The method's signature needs to be: `def (self, event)`, where "event" is the event data provided by i3wm. The full list of possible bindings: - LEFT_MOUSE - RIGHT_MOUSE - MIDDLE_MOUSE - WHEEL_UP - WHEEL_UP ### Setting a default update interval To change the default update interval, you can use a simple decorator: ```python import core.module import core.widget import core.decorators class Module(core.module.Module): @core.decorators.every(minutes=60, seconds=20) def __init__(self, config): super().__init__(config=config, widgets=) ``` **NOTE**: This makes the update interval of the module independent of what the user configures via `-i `! It is still possible to override the module's interval using `-p .interval=`, however. ## TODOs - default update interval - scrolling - theme.minwidth - scrolling decorator - theme.exclude - per module update interval -> nice string format - update via events