Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
104 lines (56 loc) · 3.16 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

104 lines (56 loc) · 3.16 KB

Pymodoro

Running

Xmobar

Put the files into a new folder called .pymodoro inside your home folder. Configure your xmobar to display pymodoro with

Run CommandReader "~/.pymodoro/pymodoro.py" "pomodoro"

Then add it to your template.

Dzen2

Add the following configuration to your Dzen2 configuration file to retrieve the current status of your Pomodoro and paste it in your display.

^fg(\#FFFFFF)${execi 10 python ~/.pymodoro/pymodoro.py -o}

i3

The i3 module adds a little extra to pymodoro: it's using a color gradient to display the bar, from green to red depending on how may time is left. For the gradient to work, you need the colour python library first.

pip install colour

You then need to use py3status an i3status wrapper written in python.

In your ~/.i3/config file, use py3status as your status command and give your pymodoro install directory as an include path:

status_command py3status -i ~/.pymodoro/

Then add the module to your statusbar conf file (~/.config/i3status/config on my setup):

order += "pymodoroi3"

Install

To install Pymodoro system wide, run the setup.py script like this:

python setup.py install

You can also install Pymodoro using pip, whithout having to download/clone the code manually:

pip install git+https://github.com/dattanchu/pymodoro.git

Usage

A new Pomodoro -- 25 minutes followed by a break of 5 minutes -- is started by changing the timestamp of ~/.cache/pomodoro_session. This can be done by the shell command:

touch ~/.cache/pomodoro_session

If you want to use counters with different times, write them into the session file. The first number specifies the length of the Pomodoro in minutes, the second one the length of the break. Both numbers are optional. Example:

echo "20 2" > ~/.cache/pomodoro_session

Keybindings

The easiest way is to define keybindings for the commands.

Xmonad

Configure xmonad to start a new Pomodoro session by adding this to your xmonad.hs:

-- start a pomodoro
, ((modMask, xK_n), spawn "touch ~/.cache/pomodoro_session")

Or:

-- start a pomodoro
, ("M-n", spawn "touch ~/.cache/pomodoro_session")

This way, whenever you hit modMask + n, you will start a new pomodoro.

i3

Here are some shortcuts examples for i3.

# stop a pomodoro
bindsym $mod+Shift+f exec rm ~/.cache/pomodoro_session

# start/reset a pomodoro
bindsym $mod+Shift+h exec touch ~/.cache/pomodoro_session

Configure

You can set all the options via command line paramters. For a detailed description run:

~/.pymodoro.py --help

It is no longer needed to edit the script itself. If you still want to do it, open up the file ~/.pymodoro/pymodoro.py.

Hooks

There are currently two hooks, found in:

~/.pymodoro/hooks/start-pomodoro.py
~/.pymodoro/hooks/complete-pomodoro.py

Create these files and they will be executed once the pomodoro starts and stop respectively.

Credits