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 XALARM(1)                      X Version 11                       XALARM(1)
                                  Release 5



 NAME
      xalarm - alarm clock for X xmemo - memo for X xfortune - fortune for X
      xyow - yow for X

 SYNOPSIS
      xalarm [-toolkitoption ...] [-option ...] [message_text] xmemo [-
      toolkitoption ...] [-option ...] message_text xfortune [-toolkitoption
      ...] [-option ...] xyow [-toolkitoption ...] [-option ...]

 DESCRIPTION
      xalarm is an interactive alarm clock for the X(1) Window System, and
      is analogous to a combination of leave(1) and calendar(1), but much
      more powerful.  You can set the alarm either on the command line or by
      using the popup window.  At the appropriate time and date, xalarm pops
      up a window to tell you that your time is up.  The time the alarm is
      to trigger may be a specific time or a time for xalarm to wait before
      triggering.  The date may be a specific date or a number of days in
      the future.

      You can tell xalarm to pop up warning windows at specified times
      before the alarm is to trigger, in order to warn you of the impending
      triggering of the alarm, and specify what message you want the alarm
      to display.

      You can also make xalarm read alarm times and dates, along with the
      message to display in the alarm, from alarm files.  This can be done
      once by xalarm, or you can make it read from the file periodically, as
      an xalarm daemon.  This enables you to forget your regular or
      important appointments, but xalarm will tell you by popping up at the
      appropriate time.

      In the event that the current X session is terminated before xalarm
      has finished, xalarm saves its alarm (if it is not already in the
      alarm file) so that it will automatically be restarted the next time
      xalarm is invoked.  Any daemons connected to the display will go away.

      This means that you can set an alarm even if you are likely to
      terminate the X session underwhich you are currently running before it
      triggers, and the alarm will still trigger on whatever display you are
      then connected to at the time.

      The alarm window itself consists of a box of buttons and an area
      containing the alarm message.  To give you an opportunity to carry on
      after the alarm has triggered and be late anyway, xalarm allows you to
      snooze the alarm.  For the completely absent-minded, xalarm can also
      repeatedly re-trigger after a specified interval.

      To help with setting the alarm, each popup displays the current time,
      and the alarm itself also displays the time since the alarm last
      triggered.




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 USING XALARM TO SET AN ALARM
      If no alarm time is specified, xalarm will pop up a window in order
      for an alarm time to be entered.

      This form is suitable for inclusion as a menu option under a window
      manager.

      The window is also popped up if an invalid alarm or warning time is
      given (see below for date and time syntax), or if you specify that
      confirmation should be sought before setting the alarm.

      The window gives you an opportunity to change the alarm setting,
      warning times, and the message xalarm will display when the alarm is
      triggered.

      The popup resizes itself to edit any message larger than the space
      given by default.  The keymap used by the Athena Dialog widget is
      modelled on the text buffer keymap of the editor/environment emacs(1).
      Text may be entered when the pointer is anywhere within the popup.

      This popup window comprises of four separate windows, dealing with the
      alarm time, date, the warning time(s) and confirmation of all the
      settings (where you can also re-edit the alarm message).

      If the confirmation window is popped up, then you can re-edit the
      alarm time, date, or warning time(s) by switching through the windows
      using the edit buttons.  Confirmation of a window's settings is made
      using the enter buttons, and the translations resource is set so that
      the return key will do the same thing.

      From the confirmation window you can also save the alarm settings in
      your own alarm file.  You can make xalarm read alarms from this alarm
      file.

      If confirmation is not enabled, then the window for confirmation of
      all settings will not be popped up even if the other windows are.

      Also see the examples section.

 USING XALARM TO READ AN ALARM FILE
      You can put alarms in alarm files.  xalarm looks in ~/.xalarms and all
      the files in the colon separated list of files in the environment
      variable XALARMFILEPATH.

      This form is suitable for inclusion in your X start up or
      initialisation  script.  It is suited to those who start up X on a
      regular (eg. daily) basis.

      Each line in the file should consist of an optional date on which the
      alarm is to trigger, optionally followed the by time and/or message.
      If the time and/or date are/is specified, then they must be separated



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      from the date by a `-' on its own.  If both the time and message are
      given, the time must come first.

      If no date is specified, it is assumed to be today.  If no time is
      specified, the alarm will trigger at the current time on whatever date
      is given.

      The format for entries in an alarm file is therefore:

                          date [- [time] [message]]
           or
                                - [time] [message]

      To make it easier to put entries into the alarm file, xalarm can
      create them for you.  You can save settings by pressing the save
      button in the confirmation window when you have set the alarm that you
      want.  The settings are saved in the alarm file ~/.xalarms.

      You can use XALARMFILEPATH to include alarms shared among a number of
      people.  If a path in the list is not absolute, then it is assumed to
      be relative to your home directory.

      Blank lines and any line with `#' or `!' as the first character are
      ignored.  This can be used to structure and comment the alarm file.

      All other command line options and resources still apply.  See below
      for the date and time formats.  Also see the examples section.

 USING A DAEMON TO READ AN ALARM FILE
      An alternative to using the file option to search for alarms within a
      certain date, is to use an xalarm daemon.

      This form is suitable for inclusion in your X start up or
      initialisation  script.  It is suited to those whose X sessions
      typically span days.

      The daemon behaves in the same way as invoking xalarm with the file
      option, except that it periodically attempts to scan the alarm
      file(s).  The interval between scanning may be a date in the form of
      +days, or one of the special symbols daily (equivalent to +1) or
      weekly. See below for more on date formats.

      Once started, the daemon immediately reads the alarm file(s), starting
      those alarms which are within the date given.  It then sleeps until
      the number of days given ahead (on the following Sunday if given as
      weekly) at just passed midnight before trying again, ad infinitum.
      The daemon dies when the connection to the display is lost.

      Note that any xalarm processes that the daemon invokes will try to
      connect to the same display each time.  If you move displays, xalarm
      cannot know.



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      Also see the examples section.

 TIMES
      The definition is that for times given with 3 or 4 digits, the last 2
      digits are always assumed to be minutes.

      Absolute times may be suffixed with `am' or `pm', and are assumed to
      be in hours if given with 1 or 2 digits.

      Times relative to the present time must be prefixed by `+', and are
      assumed to be in minutes if given with 1 or 2 digits.

      The special symbols now and noon may also be used, and are equivalent
      to +0 and 12:00, respectively.  Hours and minutes may be separated
      with `:', `.' or `-'.

      To prevent ambiguities, hours and minutes must be in their usual
      ranges.  If a time of an hour or more is wanted, you must state it in
      hours and minutes.  It is not possible to specify days in the time.

      The format is a super-set (by far) of the format recognised by
      leave(1).

      Also see the examples section.

 DATES
      The date may be in the form of that given by date(1) (day of week, day
      of month, month, year), but can be in any order, need not be
      completely specified, and case is not significant.  xalarm attempts to
      find the nearest real date which matches the date given.

      Alternatively, the date may be specified as the number of whole days
      into the future, by prefixing the number with `+'.  The special
      symbols today, tomorrow and week may also be used, and these symbols
      may be combined.  They are equivalent to +0, +1 and +7, respectively.

      Note that if there is more than one word in the date, then the date
      must be quoted to stop the shell treating them as separate arguments.

      When given as an argument to the -date option, week means ``seven days
      into the future''.  However, when it is used as an argument to the -
      file or -daemon options, it means ``until the end of the current
      week'' (up to and including the coming Sunday), as in weekly. This is
      to make it easier to get xalarm to set all the alarms for the current
      week.

      Because the alarm is set in milliseconds, you cannot set an alarm for
      more than 49 days into the future (on the assumption that your machine
      has 32-bit unsigned longs).

      All symbols must consist of at least the first 3 characters of the



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      name.  Unlike calendar(1), tomorrow always means tomorrow.

      Also see the examples section.

 WARNINGS
      When given, warnings are popped up at specified times before the
      alarm.  You can also specify that a number of words from the alarm
      message should be displayed with any warnings, in case you've
      forgotten what you set it for.  If none are to be used, the warning
      will only indicate when the alarm is due.

      Also see the examples section.

 RINGING
      You can specify how xalarm announces itself, when either a warning or
      the alarm is popped up.  Each of these events has a separate resource,
      which can be one of the special symbols bell, beep and quiet, or a
      shell script.

      The first two cause the terminal bell to be rung, and quiet does
      nothing.  Otherwise it is assumed to be a shell script and is executed
      under a Bourne shell (sh(1)). You can also control the volume at which
      the terminal bell is rung.

      Note that if the script contains more than one word then the whole
      script must be quoted to stop the shell treating them as separate
      arguments.

      Also see the examples section.

 SNOOZING AND PESTERING
      You can snooze the alarm and make it pester you, after the alarm has
      triggered.

      Snoozing is done by selecting a time to snooze using the +mins buttons
      (they can be pressed as often as necessary) and pressing the snooze
      button.  The snooze time may be zeroed by clicking on the snoozetime
      button (it has these two functions; display and zero).  For the really
      lazy, the initial value of snoozetime can be set either by the
      relevant command line option or by its resource.

      Pestering is done either by the relevant command line option or by its
      resource.  The alarm will then re-popup after the specified interval,
      a bit like snooze on autopilot.

      Note that if you snooze the alarm, pestering is temporarily disabled
      and you will have to rely on the snoozed alarm.

      Also see the examples section.





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 MORE ON XALARM
      Even after you have set the alarm and confirmed it, you can reset the
      alarm as long as you know the xalarm process number.  This can be
      found by using the command line option to list process numbers, or
      ps(1).

      xalarm makes maximum use of resources, as well as having a number of
      command line options, and these can be used to control most of the
      appearance of xalarm and (just about) all of its behaviour.  Both
      command line options and useful resources are listed below.

      When xalarm is invoked it immediately attempts to fork off a child and
      exit itself, leaving the child to continue with the alarm.  The child
      disappears when the X session on which display xalarm is using is
      terminated.

      You can exit from xalarm at any time by pressing the available quit
      button.

 XMEMO, XFORTUNE & XYOW
      In reality, xmemo is just a front end to xalarm (implemented as xalarm
      -time now -date today), while xfortune and xyow are front ends to
      xmemo (implemented as xmemo "`fortune`" etc.).  Options supplied to
      them on the command line still override these defaults, however.

      Note that xfortune and xyow require fortune(6) and yow(6) respectively
      - yow(6) comes with emacs(1). Also note that since they are front ends
      to xmemo, you can actually give extra message text to include on the
      command line.  If you specify a time in the future, you can edit the
      message text when asked to confirm (if enabled).

 OPTIONS
      xalarm accepts all of the standard X Toolkit command line options
      along with the additional options listed below:

      -help   Print a (possibly) helpful usage message.

      -version
              Print out the version number of xalarm in the form
              version.patchlevel.

      -restart[only]
              This option makes xalarm attempt only to restart those alarms
              which had not finished when a previous X session was
              terminated.

      -kill pid|all
              This option sends a signal to the process number pid, or to
              all xalarm processes, on the current host.  If the process is
              an xalarm, owned by you, it will exit.  Note these are what
              ps(1) thinks are xalarm processes, and only on the current



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              host.

      -d[a]emon +days|daily|weekly
              This option starts a new xalarm daemon on the current host
              connected to the current display.  See the above description
              for more on alarm files, dates and daemons.

      -f[ile] +days|date|today|tomorrow|weekly
              This option makes xalarm read alarms from the alarm file(s).
              See the above description for more on the alarm file and
              dates.

      -date +days|date|today|tomorrow|week
              This option indicates the date on which the alarm is to be
              triggered.  See the above description for more on dates.

      -t[ime] +time|time|now|noon
              This option indicates at what time the alarm is to be
              triggered.  See the above description for more on times.

      -w[arn] time[,time...]
              Indicate the time(s) before the alarm is due to trigger when a
              warning should be given.  They need not be in any particular
              order, and should be in the same format as relative times, but
              without the preceding `+'.  Note that multiple times must be
              separated by commas but without spaces.

      -c[onfirm]
              This option overrides the resource value and forces xalarm to
              ask for confirmation, unless the alarm is due to trigger
              immediately.

      -warnwords [-ww] number_of_words
              Indicate the number of words from the alarm message you wish
              to display with the warning.

      -l[ist] List the process numbers of any xalarm processes running on
              the current host.  Note that this lists what ps(1) thinks are
              xalarm processes, and only on the current host.

      -r[eset] pid|all
              This option sends a signal to the process number pid, or to
              all xalarm processes, on the current host.  If the process is
              an xalarm, owned by you, it will pop up the confirmation
              window to allow you to re-edit the alarm settings.  If the
              process is an xalarm daemon, it will have no effect.  Note
              these are what ps(1) thinks are xalarm processes, and only on
              the current host.

      -p[ester] time
              Indicate the time that xalarm should wait before re-



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              triggering.  It should be in the same format as relative
              times, but without the preceding `+'.

      -s[nooze] time
              Indicate the time that snoozetime should initially have when
              the alarm triggers.  It should be in the same format as
              relative times, but without the preceding `+'.

      -alarmaudio [-aa] bell|beep|quiet|shell script
              The method by which xalarm should announce the fact that the
              alarm has been triggered.  See above for a description on the
              different options.

      -warningaudio [-wa] bell|beep|quiet|shell script
              As above, but for when any warning windows are popped up.

      -q[uiet]
              This is equivalent to specifying -alarmaudio quiet
              -warningaudio quiet, or setting the relevant resources to
              quiet.

      -v[olume] percentage
              The percentage of full volume at which the terminal bell
              should ring, if it is rung.  This currently applies to the
              terminal bell only.

      -nowarn [-nw]
              This option overrides the resource value and forces xalarm not
              to give any warnings.  This is the same as setting the warning
              times resource to the empty string.

      -noconfirm [-nc]
              This option overrides the resource value and forces xalarm not
              to ask for confirmation.

      -nowarnwords [-nww]
              This option overrides the resource value and forces xalarm not
              to display any of the alarm text with any warnings.  This is
              the same as setting the warningwords resource to zero.

      -nopester [-np]
              This option overrides the resource value and forces xalarm not
              to re-trigger the alarm once it has popped up.  This is the
              same as setting the pester resource to zero.

      -noalarmaudio [-naa] -nowarningaudio [-nwa]
              These options make the relevant resource values quiet, and are
              equivalent to setting the audio method to quiet.

      message_text
              The remaining unrecognised text is used as the message



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              displayed with the triggering of the alarm.  Note that each
              separate argument is assumed to be a single line, so words
              must be quoted if they are to appear on the same line.  For
              example:

                     % xalarm "On one line" Secondline "Third line"

              It is a good idea always to use quotes, even when a line is
              only one word.  Newlines within arguments are recognised, so
              that input from other tools can be used:

                     % xalarm -time now "`fortune -l`"

              Also note that xalarm deletes its copy of any arguments,
              including any message, given on the command line, so your boss
              can't see them by looking at the xalarm process.

 EXAMPLES
      An entry in an X initialisation file, invoked along with all the other
      utilities, before the window manager is executed, making xalarm check
      the alarm file for today's appointments, asking for confirmation
      before each of the alarms are set, and using up to three words from
      the alarm message in any warning message:

           xclock &
           xbiff &
           xalarm -file today -confirm -warnwords 3
           exec twm

      If you do not want to know about the alarms that remain from the
      previous X session, you could first restart them silently.  Here they
      are restarted with warnings set at 15 and 30 minutes prior to each
      alarm's triggering.

      To check the week's appointments, including some shared alarm files,
      warning 1 hour, and 30 and 15 minutes before each alarm (if you set
      the variable in your X initialisation script, rather than your login
      script, you may need to export it):

           XALARMFILEPATH=\
                /usr/local/lib/seminars.xlm:/usr/local/lib/meetings.xlm
           export XALARMFILEPATH
           xalarm -restartonly -noconfirm -warn 15,30
           xalarm -file weekly -confirm -warn 1:00,30,15

      Or to start an xalarm daemon, which is to scan the alarm file on a
      daily basis.  Each alarm should not ask for confirmation, but should
      give warnings 30 and 15 minutes before triggering, and pester every 5
      minutes thereafter:





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           xalarm -daemon daily -noconfirm -warn 15,30 -pester 5

      The alarm file might contain, for example, the lines:

           # This is just a comment.
           ! So is this.  Format is: date [- [time] [message]]
           !                     or:       - [time] [message]

           Wednesday - 12:30pm Football !!!
           Sun 29 september - 9pm Drag yourself home.
           Oct 4 - Contrib sometime today...

      So that every Wednesday I have an alarm set for 12:30pm; on Sunday
      September 29 there is an alarm to be set for 9pm; on October 4 the
      alarm is to trigger straight away.

      A twm(1) window manger entry which forces xalarm to ask for
      confirmation, and have the triggered alarm re-trigger every 5 minutes:

           Menu "Utilities" {
                ...
                "alarm":  f.exec "xalarm -confirm -pester 5 &"
                ...
           }

      The following examples show how to set the alarm from the command
      line.  It is often more convenient to invoke xalarm without specifying
      the time and, where necessary, the date and/or message as arguments
      (using a window manager, say, as above), using the popup window to
      enter these options.

      If this was the method of entry, the option arguments would be entered
      in the relevant Dialog box instead, just as they appear below (except
      that there is no need to quote multi-word arguments).

      To only restart those xalarm processes that were set before a previous
      X session was terminated, not including those in the alarm file:

           % xalarm -restartonly

      To set an alarm for tomorrow at noon, so as to avoid missing yet
      another meeting:

           % xalarm -date tomorrow -time noon "MEETING!!!"

      To set an alarm on Tuesday week (that is one week on from the next
      Tuesday) at 3:30 in the afternoon:

           % xalarm -date "Tues week" -time 3-30pm





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      To set an alarm for March 10th (my very own personal public holiday),
      first thing in the morning, just in case I have forgotten:

           % xalarm -date "10 march" -time 9am "Birthday boy!"

      To set an alarm for 5 o'clock in the evening without confirmation,
      with the snooze time initially 10 minutes, but with the default alarm
      message:

           % xalarm -time 5pm -snooze 10 -noconfirm

      To set an alarm for 2 hours in advance, warning 1 minute and 5 minutes
      before it, with a message other than the default:

           % xalarm -time +2.00 -warn 5,1 "Get off your bottom"

      To set a completely silent alarm for 4.30 (not specifying am/pm, so it
      is whichever is first), with the default warnings and a message other
      than the default:

           % xalarm -quiet -time 4:30 "Time to sneak off home!"

      To reset a running xalarm we first find out its process number, and
      then we can reset it:

           % xalarm -list
           xalarms: 12345 12321
           % xalarm -reset 12345

      To put a 2 line message on the display foo immediately (this will only
      work if the display foo can be opened):

           % xmemo -display foo:0.0 "Bob!" "The bar for lunch?"

      To display a fortune (a random adage from hell) at a specific geometry
      in 5 minutes:

           % xfortune -geometry +10+300 -time +5

      To display a Zippy quote (yow!!!), characteristically harassing you
      every minute and making some noise each time it triggers by executing
      a shell script:

           % xyow -pester 1 -alarmaudio "play -v30 yow.au"

      In this example, -v30 is the option to make play play the audio data
      in the file yow.au at maximum volume.

 WIDGET HIERARCHY
      xalarm uses the Athena Widget set, and the widget hierarchy is as
      follows:



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           XAlarm (applicationShell)
                Alarm! (transientShell)
                     alarm (form)
                          buttons (form)
                               quit (command)
                               snooze (command)
                               snooze1 (command)
                               snooze5 (command)
                               snooze15 (command)
                               snoozetime (command)
                          message (label)
                When? (transientShell)
                     when (form)
                          time (dialog)
                               label (label)
                               value (asciiText)
                               ok (command)
                               editdate (command)
                               editwarnings (command)
                               quit (command)
                          date (dialog)
                               label (label)
                               value (asciiText)
                               ok (command)
                               edittime (command)
                               editwarnings (command)
                               quit (command)
                          warnings (dialog)
                               label (label)
                               value (asciiText)
                               ok (command)
                               edittime (command)
                               editdate (command)
                               quit (command)
                          confirm (dialog)
                               label (label)
                               value (asciiText)
                               ok (command)
                               cancel (command)
                               save (command)
                               quit (command)
                Warning! (transientShell)
                     warning (form)
                          dismiss (command)
                          message (label)
                          reset (command)
                          quit (command)

 EXAMPLE RESOURCES
      Some example resources.  These are the most common resources, and the
      ones most likely needed changed in order to alter the (default)



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      behaviour of xalarm:

           ! For some nice colours...  If you have X11R5:
           *customization:                    -color
           ! Otherwise:
           XAlarm*background:            LightYellow
           XAlarm*foreground:            IndianRed
           XAlarm*Command.background:         IndianRed
           XAlarm*Command.foreground:         LightYellow
           XAlarm.When?.when.Dialog.background:    MidnightBlue
           XAlarm.Warning!.warning.background:     HotPink
           XAlarm.Alarm!.alarm.background:         DarkGreen
           ! This is what you normally get...
           XAlarm*background:            White
           XAlarm*foreground:            Black
           XAlarm*Command.background:         Black
           XAlarm*Command.foreground:         White

           ! Perhaps the most commonly used resources...
           XAlarm.confirm:                    True
           XAlarm.warnings:              5,15
           XAlarm.warningwords:               0
           XAlarm.pester:                0
           XAlarm.snooze:                0
           XAlarm.volume:                50
           XAlarm.alarmaudio:            bell
           XAlarm.warningaudio:               bell

           ! If the fonts are not to your taste, try "-new century schoolbook-"
           ! instead of "-times-".
           XAlarm*font: -*-times-bold-r-*-*-14-*-*-*-p-*-iso8859-1
           XAlarm.When?.when.confirm.value*font: -*-times-bold-i-*-*-14-*-*-*-p-*-iso8859-1
           XAlarm.Alarm!.alarm.message.font: -*-times-bold-i-*-*-34-*-*-*-p-*-iso8859-1

           ! If you want a more compact alarm window, try these...
           XAlarm.Alarm!.alarm.buttons.snooze1.fromVert:     quit
           ! This will vary depending on button labels & font...
           XAlarm.Alarm!.alarm.buttons.snooze1.horizDistance:     -93
           XAlarm.Alarm!.alarm.buttons.snooze5.fromVert:     quit
           XAlarm.Alarm!.alarm.buttons.snooze15.fromVert:    quit
           XAlarm.Alarm!.alarm.buttons.snoozetime.fromHoriz: snooze

           ! Plus, if you want...
           XAlarm.Alarm!.alarm.message.fromHoriz:       buttons
           ! This will vary depending on button labels & font...
           XAlarm.Alarm!.alarm.message.vertDistance:         -33

           ! Some other defaults...
           XAlarm.Alarm!.alarm.background:         Black
           XAlarm.Alarm!.alarm.message.label:      Alarm Call!!!
           XAlarm.Alarm!.alarm.buttons.quit.label: Quit



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           XAlarm.Alarm!.alarm.buttons.snooze.label:    Snooze
           XAlarm.Alarm!.alarm.buttons.snooze1.label:   +1 min
           XAlarm.Alarm!.alarm.buttons.snooze5.label:   +5 mins
           XAlarm.Alarm!.alarm.buttons.snooze15.label:  +15 mins

 TOOLKIT OPTIONS
      The following standard X Toolkit command line arguments are commonly
      used with xalarm:

      -display display
              This option specifies the X server to contact.

      -geometry geometry
              This option specifies the preferred size and position of
              xalarm. It is a little meaningless to specify a size; it is as
              large as need be.

      -xrm resourcestring
              This option specifies a resource string to be used.  This is
              especially useful for setting resources that do not have
              separate command line options.

 ENVIRONMENT
      DISPLAY to get the default host and display number.

      XENVIRONMENT
              to get the name of a resource file that overrides the global
              resources stored in the RESOURCE_MANAGER property.

      XALARMFILEPATH
              a colon separated list of file names to be used in conjunction
              with ~/.xalarms for xalarm to look for alarms to set.

      USER    The user's login name.  This may be used by xalarm when
              looking for the user's name for the alarm title, or the user's
              xalarm processes.

      HOME    The user's home directory.  This may be used by xalarm when
              looking for the user's alarm file.

 FILES
      ~/.xalarms
              The name of the alarm file looked at by xalarm for alarms to
              set and where alarms are saved.  See also the environment
              variable XALARMFILEPATH.

      ~/.xalarms.died
              The name of the alarm file where xalarm stores its alarm which
              had not finished when the X session under which it was running
              was terminated.




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 SEE ALSO
      X(1), leave(1), calendar(1), date(1), emacs(1), twm(1), ps(1), sh(1),
      fortune(6), yow(6)

 BUGS
      Preamble:
              Because of the way xalarm has evolved (it started as a 24-hour
              period one-off alarm clock), its dealing with dates, alarm
              files and the interface to these is not ideal.  Nobody said
              evolution was perfect.

              If you want to report a bug, or anything else, please first
              give as much information as you can.  See COMMENTS at the end
              of the manual.

      General:
              Each alarm is a separate, forked, xalarm process, each with
              its own connection to the display.  There is no way to get
              xalarm to set more than one alarm or to display on several
              displays at once.

              Because xalarm is one of those clients you tend to start from
              a window manager or from an X initialisation script, you may
              not see error messages that these xalarm processes write to
              standard error.  You will only see them if this output also
              goes to, or is redirected to, your display.

              If your shell initialisation script does any output, xalarm
              may get confused when trying to list other xalarm processes
              (and therefore also when killing or resetting all xalarm
              processes).

      Daemons:
              If you terminate the session which an xalarm daemon is running
              under, the daemon does not exit until just before it re-tries
              to start new alarms from the alarm file.  It is possible, but
              unlikely, that someone else may have got your particular
              display connection (not physical display) in the meantime.
              xalarm cannot know when this happens.

              It would be nice to be able to tell daemon and normal xalarm
              processes apart when listing them.

      Saving to file:
              The date saved in the alarm file is the exact date the alarm
              would trigger, not the date specified in the date input popup
              window.  Both types of behaviour have their advantages, but
              only this behaviour is implemented.

              The same happens with those alarms that are saved when the X
              session under which they are running is terminated.  This type



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              of behaviour does seem more useful than the alternative.

              Currently does not satisfactorily save alarms with multi-line
              messages.

      Restarting:
              Because uncompleted alarms are saved in the same format as the
              alarm file format, the resource environment of restarted
              alarms is inherited from the xalarm which restarted them.
              This is not necessarily the same as the original resource
              environments of these alarms.

      Times & Dates:
              xalarm is at the mercy of the system clock.

              The message informing at what time xalarm is to trigger may
              appear to be wrong if the clocks go forwards or backwards
              between the present and the time it is due to trigger.

              If the time is relative to the present and confirmation is
              sought, the alarm and warnings are set from when the time is
              confirmed, not from when xalarm was invoked.

              Date and symbol names are recognised by the first three
              characters only, the rest are ignored.  This is why week and
              weekly are equivalent, and midday and midnight are not
              implemented.  There is no real wild carding within dates.

              You can only set an alarm that will trigger within the next 49
              days (on the assumption that your machine has 32-bit unsigned
              longs).

      Editing:
              The dialog box uses a subset of the emacs(1)
              editor/environment keymap for text buffers (which is certainly
              not a bug!).

              However, the return key event is translated by default into
              the confirm button event, as it is translated similarly in the
              alarm time and warning dialog boxes.  To insert a newline, use
              ctrl-m (since under emacs(1) the return key is a synonym for
              ctrl-m, under X they generate different events), or just
              change the relevant resource(s) so that return produces the
              desired effect.  The resources, followed by the necessary
              value, are:

           XAlarm.When?.time.value.translations
                   XAlarm.When?.date.value.translations
                   XAlarm.When?.warnings.value.translations
                   XAlarm.When?.confirm.value.translations




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                                  #override <Key>Return: newline()

      Resetting & Killing:
              Signalling is implemented very simply, and if the process
              signalled is not an xalarm, strange things may occur.
              Usually, nothing will happen.

              However, killing does not use the KILL signal, and is
              therefore relatively safe to use even though your ps(1) can
              never be 100% reliable.

              Still, this can mean that when you reset or kill all xalarm
              processes, not all will have been signalled.

      Input:  Doesn't take input from a pipe etc.

      Audio:  Doesn't parse the alarm or warning message to produce voice
              output(!)

 COPYRIGHT
      Copyright 1991, 1992, Simon Marshall.

 AUTHOR
      Simon Marshall, Ph.D. Self Defense Group, Dept. of Computer Science,
      University Of Hull, UK.  S.Marshall@Hull.ac.UK

 CONTRIBERS
      A lot of people have put in effort for xalarm since it was first
      released in the summer of 1991; testing, suggesting, commenting,
      cajoling and even fixing, in all the areas that software development
      entails.  Not all will have been mentioned below, but thanks for your
      input.

      Big thanks yet again have to go to Gisle Hannemyr, Norsk Regnsesentral
      (NCC), J Braham Levy, UDSP Lab, University of Keele and Ex-Tek
      Associates (UK), and Stefan Haenssgen, Informatik Rechnerabteilung,
      University of Karlsruhe, for their help with ideas, comments and code,
      in the making of xalarm version 3.03.  Thanks also to Paul Moore and
      Kirk Morgan for their help in porting xalarm for versions 3.04 and
      3.05.

      For getting version 3 from version 2 in the first place, thanks have
      to go to Bill Leonard, Harris Computer Systems Division, Florida, for
      harassing me with suggestions for improvements to make xalarm version
      3 a useful tool and this manual page easier to understand, and Andreas
      Stolcke, International Computer Science Institute, Berkeley, for his
      help fixing code.  Without both, xalarm would still be pretty much as
      version 2.

      Thanks also to J Braham Levy, Stefan Haenssgen, Jamie Zawinski, Jason
      Venner and Kimmo Suominen for their help with version 3.



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      For their help and suggestions with xalarm "over the years", I would
      also like to thank (in no real order) Steve Aronson, Dave Brooks,
      Reiner Hammer, Jay Lawlor, Janet Anstett, Gordon Freedman, Francois-
      Regis Colin and Jeffrey Mast.  If I've missed anyone, sorry.


 COMMENTS
      I'd welcome any; comments, suggestions, code, bug reports and fixes,
      etc.  Don't forget to include which version of xalarm you are using
      (from xalarm -version), machine/OS, X release & patch number, window
      manager etc.











































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