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Desktop::Notify

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NAME

Desktop::Notify - A simple interface to libnotify

SYNOPSIS

use Desktop::Notify::Simple;

my $n = Desktop::Notify::Simple.new(
  :app-name('test'),
  :summary('Attention!'),
  :body('What just happened?'),
  :icon('stop')
).show;

sleep 2;

$n.update(:summary('Oh well!'), :body('Not quite a disaster!'), :icon('stop')).show;
use Desktop::Notify :constants;

my $notify = Desktop::Notify.new(app-name => 'myapp');
my $n = $notify.new-notification('Attention!', 'What just happened?', 'stop');

$notify.set-timeout($n, NOTIFY_EXPIRES_NEVER);

$notify.show($n);
sleep 2;

$notify.update($n, 'Oh well!', 'Not quite a disaster!', 'stop');

$notify.show($n);

DESCRIPTION

Desktop::Notify::Simple is a set of very simple bindings to libnotify using NativeCall.

new(Str :$app-name!, Str :$summary!, Str :$body!, Str :$icon!, Int :$timeout?, Str :$category?, NotifyUrgency :$urgency?)

Constructs a new Desktop::Notify::Simple object. It takes four mandatory arguments:

and three optional arguments:

An enum NotifyUrgency is available.

show(GError $err?)

Shows the notification on screen. It takes one optional argument, the GError object. (The default Desktop::Notify error handling is not thread safe. See Threading safety for more info)

update(Str :$summary, Str :$body, Str :$icon)

Modifies the messages of a notification which is already on screen.

close(GError $err?)

Closes the notification. It takes one optional argument, the GError object. (The default Desktop::Notify error handling is not thread safe. See Threading safety for more info) Note that usually there's no need to explicitly 'close' a notification, since the default is to automatically expire after a while.

Desktop::Notify is a set of simple bindings to libnotify using NativeCall. Some function calls are not currently implemented (see the TODO section).

new(Str $appname)

Constructs a new Desktop::Notify object. It takes one mandatory argument: app-name, the name of the app that will be registered with the notify dæmon.

is-initted(--> Bool)

Returns True if the object has been successfully initialized.

app-name(--> Str)

app-name(Str $appname)

Queries or sets the app name.

new-notification(Str $summary!, Str $body!, Str $icon! --> NotifyNotification)

new-notification(Str :$summary!, Str :$body!, Str :$icon!, Int :$timeout?, Str :$category?, NotifyUrgency :$urgency? --> NotifyNotification)

Creates a new notification. The first form takes three positional arguments: the summary string, the notification string and the icon to display (See the libnotify documentation for the available icons). The second form takes a number of named argument. summary, body, and icon are mandatory, the others are optional. If timeout (expressed in milliseconds), category, and urgency are defined, this method will call the corresponding "set" methods documented below.

show(NotifyNotification $notification!, GError $err? --> Bool)

Shows the notification on screen. It takes one mandatory argument, the NotifyNotification object, and one optional argument, the GError object. (The default Desktop::Notify error handling is not thread safe. See Threading safety for more info)

close(NotifyNotification $notification!, GError $err? --> Bool)

Closes the notification. It takes one mandatory argument, the NotifyNotification object, and one optional argument, the GError object. (The default Desktop::Notify error handling is not thread safe. See Threading safety for more info) Note that usually there's no need to explicitly 'close' a notification, since the default is to automatically expire after a while.

why-closed(NotifyNotification $notification! --> Int)

Returns the the closed reason code for the notification. It takes one argument, the NotifyNotification object. (See the libnotify documentation for the meaning of this code)

get-type(--> Int)

Returns the notification type.

update(NotifyNotification $notification!, Str $summary, Str $body, Str $icon --> Bool)

Modifies the messages of a notification which is already on screen.

set-timeout(NotifyNotification $notification!, Int $timeout!)

Sets the notification timeout. There are two available constants, NOTIFY_EXPIRES_DEFAULT and NOTIFY_EXPIRES_NEVER, when explicitly imported with use Desktop::Notify :constants;.

set-category(NotifyNotification $notification, Str $category!)

Sets the notification category (See the libnotify documentation).

set-urgency(NotifyNotification $notification, NotifyUrgency $urgency!)

Sets the notification urgency. An enum NotifyUrgency is available when explicitly imported with use Desktop::Notify :constants;.

server-caps(--> Seq)

Reads server capabilities and returns a sequence.

server-info(--> Hash)

Reads the server info and returns an hash. The return value of the C function call is returned as the value of the return key of the hash.

Threading safety

Desktop::Notify offers a simple interface which provides an error class member, which is automatically used by the functions which need it. Since 'error' is a shared class member, if a program makes use of threading, its value might be written by another thread before it's been read. In this case one can declare their own GError variables:

my $err = Desktop::Notify::GError.new;

and pass it as an optional argument to the .show() and .close() methods; it will be used instead of the object-wide one.

Prerequisites

This module requires the libnotify library to be installed. Please follow the instructions below based on your platform:

Debian and Ubuntu

sudo apt install libnotify4

Installation

$ zef install Desktop::Notify

Testing

To run the tests:

$ prove -e "raku -Ilib"

Note

With version 0.2.0 I modified the enum NotifyUrgency to avoid polluting (too much) the namespace. Now instead of e.g. low, one has to use NotifyUrgencyLow.

Author

Fernando Santagata

License

The Artistic License 2.0