Development/Tutorials/SuperKaramba

From KDE TechBase

SuperKaramba

Intro

SuperKaramba is a tool that allows one to easily create functionality enhancement modules on a KDE desktop. Such modules are interactive programs written in Python or Ruby that are usually embedded directly into the background and do not disturb the normal view of the desktop.

Links

Examples

A clock sample with Ruby and Python

Let's take a look at one of them, the clock.rb theme written in Ruby. The theme just displays the current time in a RichText widget.

require 'karamba'

def initWidget(widget)
    Karamba.resizeWidget(widget, 300, 120)
    @richtext = Karamba.createRichText(widget, Time.now.to_s)
    Karamba.moveRichText(widget, @richtext, 10, 10)
    Karamba.setRichTextWidth(widget, @richtext, 280)
    Karamba.redrawWidget(widget)
end

def widgetUpdated(widget)
    puts  >> widgetUpdated"
    Karamba.changeRichText(widget, @richtext, Time.now.to_s)
    Karamba.redrawWidget(widget)
end

The initWidget method will be called once if the widget got initialized. Here we setup the RichText widget where we display the current time in. The widgetUpdated will be called each second once (the interval is defined in the clock.theme themefile) and just updates the text display in the RichText widget with the new time.

Let's take a look at another theme. The text.py theme written in Python just displays some text widgets. We take this is example to create our own script, that does the same as the clock.rb above, that is to display the current time within a text widget.

import karamba, time

text = None

def initWidget(widget):
    text = karamba.createText(widget, 0, 20, 200, 20, "Text meter")

def widgetUpdated(widget):
    t = time.strftime("%Y-%M-%d %H:%M.%S")
    karamba.changeText(widget, text, t)

In the initWidget method we create our text widget that is updated once per second (or per interval as defined in the matching theme file) at the widgetUpdated method to display the new current time.

TkInter with Python

While you are also able to use PyQt4 which doesn't look only nicer but also provides the nice Qt-API pythonized, you are also able to use the default toolkit Python comes with, that is TkInter.

The following sample just displays a TkInter "hello world" dialog if you click on the widget.

import karamba

def widgetClicked(widget, x, y, button):
    from Tkinter import *
    root = Tk()
    w = Label(root, text="Hello, world!")
    w.pack()
    root.mainloop()

QtRuby/Korundum with Ruby

The following sample script written in Ruby demonstrates that you are able to use QtRuby/Korundum within your Ruby scripts.

require 'karamba'
require 'Qt'

class Dialog < Qt::Dialog
    def initialize
        super()
        self.windowTitle = 'Hello World'
    end
end

def widgetClicked(widget, x, y, button)
    dialog = Dialog.new
    dialog.exec
end

The script does implement only the widgetClicked function that got called if the user clicks on the widget. What we do within that function is to create an instance of the Dialog class that implements a QDialog using QtRuby and then execute that modal dialog.