Package: wmii-doc
Version: 1:1-4
Severity: normal
Tags: patch

The command "wmiir read DIR/" does not print a directory listing
anymore. Instead, it produces garbage output. It should now be replaced
by "wmiir ls DIR/".

I corrected these commands in the beginner guide.

I also realised that the "bar/" wmii directory does no longer exist, and
is replaced by two ones: "lbar/" and "rbar/". As they are refered to in
the same paragraphs than some "wmiir read DIR/" commands, I corrected it
too.

-- System Information:
Debian Release: lenny/sid
  APT prefers testing
  APT policy: (990, 'testing'), (500, 'unstable'), (500, 'stable')
Architecture: i386 (i686)

Kernel: Linux 2.6.23.11
Locale: LANG=fr_FR.UTF-8, LC_CTYPE=fr_FR.UTF-8 (charmap=UTF-8)
Shell: /bin/sh linked to /bin/bash

wmii-doc depends on no packages.

Versions of packages wmii-doc recommends:
ii  wmii                        3.6+debian-4 lightweight tabbed and tiled X11 w

-- no debconf information
--- orig/wmii-doc-1/beginnersguide-en/beginnersguide.tex        2006-06-18 
14:14:49.000000000 +0200
+++ wmii-doc-1/beginnersguide-en/beginnersguide.tex     2008-01-11 
11:44:16.000000000 +0100
@@ -533,7 +533,7 @@
       manually with the \emph{-a  address} command line option.
       A sample invocation looks like:
       \begin{verbatim}
-        wmiir read /
+        wmiir ls /
       \end{verbatim}
       This command actually prints the contents of the root directory of the
       virtual file-system of \wmii.
@@ -637,12 +637,12 @@
     unobtrusively exported with the following \emph{environment variables}.
 
     \begin{verbatim}
-      WMII_SELCOLORS='#000000 #eaffff #8888cc'
+      WMII_FOCUSCOLORS='#000000 #eaffff #8888cc'
       WMII_NORMCOLORS='#000000 #ffffea #bdb76b'
       WMII_FONT=static
     \end{verbatim}
 
-    \verb+WMII_SELCOLORS+ defines the colours of the selected client's window
+    \verb+WMII_FOCUSCOLORS+ defines the colours of the selected client's window
     title and border, whereas \verb+WMII_NORMCOLORS+ defines the colours of all
     unselected clients. The numbers are hexadecimal rgb tuple-values, which you
     might know from HTML. You can grab them with the Gimps colour-chooser for 
instance.
@@ -658,43 +658,40 @@
     \subsection{Filling the status-bar}
     \label{subsec:status}
     
-    The status bar of \wmii{} has its own \verb+/bar+ directory with
-    a subdirectory for each of the labels created. So while editing
+    The status bar of \wmii{} has two directories: \verb+/lbar+ for its
+    left side, and \verb+/rbar+ for its rigth side. They contains
+    a file for each of the labels created. So while editing
     this document my status-bar looked like:
 
     \begin{verbatim}
-      $ wmiir read /bar
-      d-r-x------ salva salva     0 Mon Apr 17 14:19:51 2006 1
-      d-r-x------ salva salva     0 Mon Apr 17 14:19:51 2006 2
-      d-r-x------ salva salva     0 Mon Apr 17 14:19:51 2006 status
+      $ wmiir ls -l /lbar
+      --rw------- salva salva     0 Mon Apr 17 14:19:51 2006 1
+      --rw------- salva salva     0 Mon Apr 17 14:19:51 2006 2
+      $ wmiir ls -l /rbar
+      --rw------- salva salva     0 Mon Apr 17 14:19:51 2006 status
     \end{verbatim}
     
-    At the same time each of the subdirectories contains two files,
+    Colors (optional) and label texts are defined in these files:
 
     \begin{verbatim}
-      $ wmiir read /bar/status
-      --rw------- salva salva    23 Mon Apr 17 14:22:14 2006 colors
-      --rw------- salva salva    23 Mon Apr 17 14:22:14 2006 data
+      $ wmiir read /lbar/1
+      #000000 #eaffff #8888cc 1
     \end{verbatim}
 
 
-    The first file contains the colour definitions that control how the
-    bar will be drawn, while the second contains the data
-    which is displayed.
-    
     Now you can start your own experiments by creating a new label, and
     exploring and modifying it by reading \& writing values to its
-    \verb+colors+ \& \verb+data+ files.  A nice feature of the bar
-    (and clients) is that they generate events corresponding to mouse
-    clicks on them.  You can open a terminal and run
-    \verb+wmiir read /event+ to see how the events are generated
-    when you click onto the status-bar. This is a mechanism that allows
-    controlling applications directly from the bar. If you've
-    finished and you want to get rid of your label,
-    a \verb+wmiir remove /bar/foo+ command.
+    file.  A nice feature of the bar (and clients) is that they generate
+    events corresponding to mouse clicks on them.  You can open a
+    terminal and run \verb+wmiir read /event+ to see how the events are
+    generated when you click onto the status-bar. This is a mechanism
+    that allows controlling applications directly from the bar. If
+    you've finished and you want to get rid of your label, just issue a
+    \verb+wmiir remove /{l|r}bar/foo+ command.
     
     If you want to learn more, take a look at the status script and 
-    visit \hrefx{http://wmii.de} for good examples, like the following:
+    visit \hrefx{http://wmii.de}\footnote{That site seems dead, maybe it has 
moved?}
+    for good examples, like the following:
 
     \begin{itemize*}
     \item \emph{status}: monitoring remaining battery, temperature, \dots on 
laptops

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