![]() dividers or even switch between upside and downside styles according to the content that needs to be displayed (see the Audio vs Player layouts), and so on.dividers or separated in two by them, I can have a basicly formatted list or a more thoroughly formatted layout below the.That means I can have a large number of things not present in the main skin, I can have them in a different order compared to the main skin, I can have lines without the The thing is that I can have literally everything in tooltips, and that is the whole point, because that's why they're superior to the standard ones (albeit slightly more complex to implement, which is why I made a " tutorial" at the time in the Tips & Tricks section of the forum). Well, I did apply your suggestion to a tooltip skin that's typical when it comes to the diversity of the layouts, orders, texts I can have in a tooltip, and this is the result (left = old style, right = new style) - you tell me if it'd work or not (the colors are not important, as they can be changed, I'm talking about the way they're distributed): But too many color changes could have the opposite effect because of eyes then concentrating on these changes instead of what they resemble. I know your intention is to seperate different parts of contents there to ease the visual access. A more neutral color (or at least as you already mentioned not more than another color) would divide the output - at the top the shortened details from the menu bar in full length in the tooptip, easy to recognize by using the same colors, on the other hand additional information at the bottom, easy to recognize be the fourth color not being so intrusive. Yue wrote: ↑ May 16th, 2023, 12:08 pmThere were two suggestions in my last post (described in the second example): I would use something that´s not as eyecatching as the title color and while you don´t want to get too colorful (expecially since you stated you don´t want to have a resemblance with SilverAzide´s Gadgets) I would use a color that´s going soft on the eyes (yeah, no red^^) like grey. Then I cannot imagine a way to get the usage of the physical cores (no matter whether they have one or two logical processors). As I understand now, even while your skin names them "Core1", "Core2" (.) these too are logical ones and (regarding cpu, not network and the other options it provides) your plugin is (only) used for the tooltip information on physical amounts of cpu and cores, right? ![]() I thought with your plugin it was possible to show the physical cores´usage (like the average of the corresponding two logical processors if there are two), which is what I asked before. ![]() I read, I tried and it helped with some additional information - the amount of cpu curcuits and the amount of physical cores (what I would have asked about later but that is already answered now by your plugin).īut as you wrote, "lua not needed" to show "logical" cores. P.S.: The ActiveNet doc is again for the hint. Lua is definitely not needed if you just want a simple/normal skin that shows 64 or fewer logical cores. Adjust text color, font, positioning, and sizing to suit your preferences.I use Lua to configure the skin because the logic is more complicated than what you can do with Rainmeter. Step 5: Explore the script to customize the appearance of your CPU temperature meters. Load the skin using the Rainmeter Manage dialog. ini extension and place it in the Rainmeter\Skins directory. Step 3: Copy and paste the following script into a new Rainmeter skin file, adjusting the settings as needed
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |