table of contents
BINCLOCK(1) | User Commands | BINCLOCK(1) |
NAME¶
binclock - prints time in binary format
SYNOPSIS¶
binclock [OPTION]...
DESCRIPTION¶
It shows the system time in a binary format. It supports showing the time with seven different colors, and it can run a loop that prints the time every second.
Colors and characters can be changed with a config file.
- -l, --loop
- loops the time printing every second.
- --color=[on|off]
- control if color will be used for time output.
- --help
- display this help and exit
- --version
- output version information and exit
- -t, --traditional
- prints ime in traditional output (0000 : 0000 : 00)
- -n, --normal
- binclock displays an additional human readable time.
If there is no CONFIG file the default colors are red (1) and white.
COLORS AND CHARACTERS¶
- color_one=red
- color for the one.
- color_zero=green
- color for the zero.
- char_one=1
- sets the character for the one.
- char_zero=0
- sets the character for the zero
FILES¶
- ~/.binclockrc
- User configuration file.
- /etc/binclockrc
- System-wide configuration file.
REPORTING BUGS¶
Report bugs to <binclock@ngolde.de>.
NO WARRANTIES¶
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
AUTHOR¶
Nico Golde
Use <binclock@ngolde.de> to contact the developer.
July 2004 | binclock 1.5 |