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The Unofficial Enlightenment User's Manual

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General Information

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What is Enlightenment?

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Enlightenment, commonly referred to as e, is an open source software X window manager primarily for Unix-like computers. Enlightenment focuses on pushing the limits of existing technologies while remaining lightweight, flexible, and beautiful. The project has a long history; the current stable version is 0.17, also known as E17. See the wikipedia articles on Enlightenment and the Enlightenment Foundation Libraries, the project's website, or the project's sourceforge page for more information.

What is "The Unofficial Enlightenment User's Manual"?

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The Unofficial Enlightenment User's Manual is the document you are now reading. It is a community-created guide to help enlightenment users and potential new enlightenment users quickly and coherently understand how best to install, customize, and use the Enlightenment window manager. It is an editable wikibook released under the GNU Free Documentation License.

Who might want to use this document?

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Anyone looking for tips, tricks, help, and information on setting up and using the Enlightenment window manager.

Who should contribute to this document?

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Anyone can edit this document, and we encourage you to add any tips, tricks or information about using Enlightenment! This document is created by Enlightenment enthusiasts for Enlightenment users, and it can always use relevant information. If you have never edited a wikimedia page before, we encourage you to read through the Help page for page editing, the Wikibooks policies guide, and the Wikibooks Manual of Style; after that, dive in and start editing! If you have questions or concerns, please visit the talk page.

Getting Started

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The Enlightenment Logo

A note about different enlightenment versions

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A note about different operating environments

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Other places to look for information

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enlightenment installation guide

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Installing Enlightenment 0.17 (also known as E17 or DR17) is a snap in suse. You just use YAST and it is all done for you. After the progress bar is finished you then log out. When you look at the sessions available at the login screen, Enlightenment is now available. How you get to yast and all the other programs through enlightenment, I don't know!

There is a quickstart guide for E17 in Suse at http://archive.is/20121225190143/arun.wordpress.com/2006/06/15/how-to-enlightenment-17-in-suse-10/

A HOWTO for Gentoo can be found at http://en.gentoo-wiki.com/wiki/E17

Check out the following link to install DR17 in Suse Linux : http://www.novell.com/coolsolutions/feature/16231.html

There are no up-to-date official binaries for E17 for Debian- or Ubuntu-based distributions. Packages labeled "e17" in the Ubuntu repositories are actually e16 and are dated December 2004.

Installing e from a terminal

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open a terminal and become root, or su, or sudo

in mine, (Mandriva 2008, running Eterm)

 [root@localhost ~]# apt-get install enlightenment

or

 [root@localhost ~]# yum install enlightenment

or

 [root@localhost ~]# urpmi enlightenment

one of these should install enlightenment if you are already connected.

enlightenment DR16 configuration guide

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Enlightenment is extremely configurable - that is you can alter or re-design almost any feature of the window manager. The only downside is that to get a really cool environment, you have to do the work. Or download a theme someone else has done for you.


Getting Background images to change from middle click menu-in .e16

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using a terminal (i prefer Eterm) you should see

[yourloginname@localhost ~]$su <enter> 
password <your root password- type it in, <enter>>

now, your terminal will look like

[root@localhost yun]# 

now we are root.


[root@localhost yun]# ls -a

see a report of folders, etc., you need to see ".e16" so you can change into that directory

[root@localhost yun]# cd .e16


notice we will leave our yun directory and are now in .e16- (below) lets add a folder for images


[root@localhost .e16]# mkdir /backgrounds


now, we can "cd" into /backgrounds, and see all the files in there (now, there's none, but this is where you want background images to be for the middle menu button, if you want to download them directly into this directory, choose to save image into the same path, yun > .e16 > backgrounds <save>

      • note***- sometimes the "background" menu dissapears, to restore it on the fly,
-middle click > maintenance > purge all caches *OR* regenerate menus 

now, to test your new backgrounds from the middle click menu

 middle click > Desktop > backgrounds 

= your backgrounds are now tiny images to help you select, on the fly swapping, select any of the small image icons, and watch your background flip instantly (ensure proper dimensions on image, like 1200x720 )

staying in .e16 other menu/ simple config

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You should by now have a folder titled ".e16" in your home directory. This is the configuration point for enlightenment.

It has a layout as follows:

backgrounds/
cached/
icons/
menus/
themes/
e_config--0.0.backgrounds
e_config--0.0.buttons
e_config--0.0.cfg
e_config--0.0.ibox
e_config--0.0.snapshots


Let's start with menus Left click anywhere on the desktop, and up comes a menu titled "User Menus" Straight off this is the "User Application List"!1. This is a list of commands that can be configured by you to run as children of the process running enlightenment.

On my installation (Mint 9 Julia) "User Application List" did not appear, though user_apps.menu existed and had entries. I had to change /usr/share/e16/config/menus/enlightenment.menu where I changed the line '"User Menus" NULL menu file.menu' to read '"User Menus" NULL menu user_apps.menu' Then the entries showed as a menu straight off the "User Menus" list.

edit .e16/menus/user_apps.menu

Add the following line to the bottom

"Clock" NULL exec "xclock"

now save and try left-clicking again. You should see a menu option for the clock, selecting that option and you have just configured your desktop.


enlightenment DR17 configuration guide

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E17 screenshot (2014)