xwrits - reminds you to take wrist breaks
xwrits [-display display] [typetime=time]
[breaktime=time] [other options]
Xwrits reminds you to take wrist breaks for prevention or management of
repetitive stress injuries. When you should take a break, it pops up an X
window, the warning window. You click on the warning window, then take a
break. The window changes appearance while you take the break. It changes
again when your break is over. Then you just resume typing. Xwrits hides
itself until you should take another break.
The typetime option changes the amount of time between
breaks, and the breaktime option changes the length of a break. The
defaults are 55 minutes and 5 minutes, respectively.
Xwrits's graphics are brightly colored pictures of a wrist and
hand. The hand clenches and spreads ``as if in pain'' on the warning window,
slumps relaxed during the break, and points forward valiantly when the break
is over. It is trapped behind bars while the keyboard is locked. Other
gestures are included (see the +finger option). You can also use your
own pictures: see the warning-picture, rest-picture, and
ready-picture options.
Normally, xwrits works through annoyance -- it flashes until you
stop typing. However, an option makes it actively prevent you from typing by
locking the screen. See +lock below.
Xwrits notices when you leave your workstation idle, and treats a
long idle period as if you took a break. You can turn this off with the
-idle option. With the +mouse option, it will also monitor
your mouse movements -- you won't be able to move the mouse during a break
without aborting the break.
Each wrist break normally lasts the same amount of time. This is
what doctors suggest, but, if you'd like, the +quota option will
reward you for taking small breaks by reducing the length of the next
official break.
Some doctors recommend taking a short ``microbreak'' every five
minutes, as well as a longer break every hour. To use xwrits this way, just
run two xwrits processes, one for the microbreaks and one for the longer
breaks.
It is easy to put the warning window aside ``for 5 minutes'' and ignore it for
fifty. The after=delay option causes xwrits to escalate its
activity over time, making it harder to ignore.
Options following after come into effect after you have
ignored the warning window for delay. In other words, xwrits's
behavior escalates after delay. For instance, with this command
line,
xwrits flashtime=:2 after=10 flashtime=:.03
the warning window will begin flashing very quickly if it is ignored for 10
minutes.
Any options preceding an after option also apply following
it, unless you explicitly cancel them. For example:
xwrits +finger after=10 -finger
Multiple after options create a series of escalations.
Delay arguments are cumulative, so ``after=10 after=10'' means the
same as ``after=20''.
One interesting use for after is to make a break's length
depend on how long you waited to take it. For example:
xwrits break=5 after=10 break=7
Here, a wrist break normally takes 5 minutes. However, if you ignore the warning
window for 10 minutes or more before taking a break, the wrist break will last
7 minutes.
All options may be abbreviated to their unique prefixes. Some may be abbreviated
further, in which case the smallest legal abbreviation is shown in brackets.
Options are processed from left to right.
Options listed as ``+option (-option)'' are toggles,
which can be on or off. A + turns the option on; - turns it off. Off is the
default for most toggle options, and only the on behavior is described. You
can leave off the + sign if you like: ``xwrits +finger'' and ``xwrits
finger'' are equivalent. Or you can say ``-no-finger'' instead of
``-finger''.
Many options take arguments. You can give these after an equal
sign, as in ``xwrits breaktime=2''. Non-optional arguments can also be given
separately, as in ``xwrits breaktime 2''.
Time arguments are expressed in minutes. For example, ``2'' is 2
minutes, ``2.5'' is 2 minutes 30 seconds. Use a colon to specify seconds:
``2:05.4'' is 2 minutes 5.4 seconds, and ``:5'' is 5 seconds.
- -display display
- Specify the X display. Xwrits monitors this display for keystrokes and
mouse movements, and displays windows on it. You can simultaneously
monitor more than one display by giving this option multiple times; for
example, ``xwrits display :0.0 display fun-orgy:0.0''.
- +multiscreen (-multiscreen)
- When this option is on, xwrits will open every available screen on each
specified display. Useful for multihead displays.
- typetime=time [t]
- Allow typing for time between breaks. Default is 55 minutes.
- breaktime=time [b]
- The amount of time a break lasts. Default is 5 minutes. This option can be
supplied multiple times; see ESCALATION above.
- after=delay-time
- See ESCALATION above.
- bars-picture=file [bp=file]
- Sets the background GIF image that appears while the screen is locked. By
default, this is an image of bars designed to work with the usual
lock-picture. If you specify your own lock-picture, however,
bars-picture defaults to a black screen. (Say
``bars-picture="&bars"'' to keep the bars.) Animations are
not acceptable.
- +beep (-beep)
- Xwrits will beep when the break should begin and again when it is
over.
- +breakclock (-breakclock) [bc]
- A clock will appear in the resting window showing how many minutes remain
in the wrist break.
- canceltime=time [ct]
- Allow typing for time after a break is cancelled. You cancel a
break by deleting all xwrits windows with your window manager. This time
should probably be less than the regular type time. Default is 10
minutes.
- +cheat[=num] (-cheat)
- Allows you to cheat during a break. You can type num keystrokes
before xwrits cancels the break. Default for num is 5. (If you're
using +mouse, mouse movements also count as keystrokes.)
- +clock (-clock) [c]
- A clock will appear in the warning window showing how many minutes you've
put off the wrist break.
- +finger (-finger) [f]
- The warning window will be rude to you.
- +finger=culture
- The warning window will be rude to you, according to culture's idea
of rudeness. Possible values for culture are `american' (the
default), `korean' (synonyms `japanese' and `russian'), `german', or the
name of any GIF image file.
- flashtime=time
- The amount of time between flashes of the warning window. Default is 2
seconds.
- +flipoff (-flipoff)
- Synonym for +finger.
- +iconified (-iconified)
- The warning window will initially appear as an icon.
- +idle[=idletime] (-idle) [i]
- If you leave your workstation idle for idletime or longer, xwrits
will behave as if you took a break. The default for idletime is the
break length (see breaktime above). idle is on by
default.
- +lock[=jump-time] (-lock)
- Xwrits will lock your screen until your break is over. You can prematurely
disable the lock and get a normal warning window by typing your password
(see password below). The jump-time argument specifies how
fast the screensaver will move; default is 4 seconds. If the keyboard has
been grabbed by another application when the lock is attempted, the lock
fails and a normal warning window appears instead.
- lock-picture=file [lp=file]
- Sets the GIF image that appears while the screen is locked. Animations are
acceptable. See also bars-picture.
- maxhands=num
- No more than num warning windows will appear on your screen
simultaneously. Normally, there will be only one warning window, but see
+multiply below. Num cannot be less than 1, or more than
137. Default is 25.
- minbreaktime=time
- Sets the minimum break length to time. This option is meaningful
when +quota is on (see below); no matter how many short breaks you
take, the break length will not be shortened below time. It
defaults to half the break time or the quota time, whichever is
larger.
- mono (-mono)
- Xwrits will display its graphics in black and white. This may be useful if
you live in a world with a limited colormap.
- +mouse[=sensitivity] (-mouse)
- Xwrits will monitor your mouse movements. Every couple seconds, it checks
whether the mouse has moved. Movements of more than sensitivity
pixels in any direction are treated like key presses. Default for
sensitivity is 15 pixels.
- +multiply[=breed-time] (-multiply) [m]
- A new warning window will be created every breed-time. Default for
breed-time is 2.3 seconds.
- +noiconify (-noiconify)
- The warning window will not allow itself to be iconified.
- +once[=count]
- Put up the warning window once, or (with count) count times,
then exit.
- password=password
- The password you type to unlock a locked screen (see +lock above).
Xwrits does not protect this password from intruders. Therefore, do not
use your login password or any other password you must keep secure.
Default is ``quit''.
- +quota[=time] (-quota)
- If you leave your workstation idle for more than time, the idle
time is deducted from the length of your next break. This option turns the
break length into a break quota -- instead of resting for breaktime
consecutive minutes every typetime, you must rest for a total of
breaktime minutes per typetime. Default for time is 1
minute. See also minbreaktime.
- ready-picture=file [okp=file]
- Sets the image that appears when your break is over to an arbitrary GIF.
Animations are acceptable.
- rest-picture=file [rp=file]
- Sets the image that appears during your break to an arbitrary GIF.
Animations are acceptable.
- title=text
- Xwrits windows will have text for their title, instead of the
default ``xwrits''.
- +top (-top)
- The warning window will try to keep itself above all other windows on the
desktop. (Note: it can be fooled into staying only partially
visible.)
- +verbose (-verbose)
- Xwrits will print a lot of information about the windows on which it is
listening for keystrokes. This is mostly useful for debugging.
- version
- Prints the version number and some quickie warranty information and
exits.
- warning-picture=file [wp=file]
- Sets the image that appears on the warning window to an arbitrary GIF.
Animations are acceptable.
Here is the way I run xwrits:
xwrits typetime=40 finger after 15 clock multiply=5:1.4
This looks pretty spectacular:
xwrits t=0 b=:2 f fla=:.5 m=:.31 max=100 -i
Whee!!
Eddie Kohler, kohler@cs.ucla.edu
http://www.cs.ucla.edu/~kohler/
http://www.lcdf.org/xwrits/
The xwrits home page (for distributions and so forth).
Idea for idle processing code from xautolock(1) by Stefan
De Troch and Michel Eyckmans
Xwrits does not use the X resource database at all.
More options might be nice. So might more careful screen locking
and password protection. I would like to include rude finger gestures from
other cultures (see the GESTURES file in the distribution for gestures I
know about so far).
Please send any bugs, comments, or suggestions to me.
Yes the misspelling is intentional.
Yes it's my left wrist.