Mike
McBride
Jost
Schenck
01/02/2001
1.00.00
KDE
KControl
panel
Panel
Introduction
The &kde; panel (often referred to as &kicker;) is
the bar that you'll usually find at the bottom of the screen when you start
up &kde; for the first time.
The panel gives you quick access to applications and makes it easier for
you to organize your desktop. Using the &kde; panel you can for example
launch applications using the K menu or
the application buttons
switch desktops using the panel's pager applet
switch active windows, and minimize or maximize them
browse directory using the browser menu functionality
access panel applets that extend the panel's functionality,
offering for example mixers, clocks or a system monitor
General
In the General tab you can configure some basic
functionality of the &kde; panel (&ie; functionality you'd find in other
panel applications as well; later we'll come to the more interesting
features).
In the Panel Location frame you can choose which
screen border the panel should be attached to. Please note that usually the
available space is used more efficiently if the panel is aligned horizontally,
&ie; attached to the top or bottom screen border. If you want to play around
with different settings you can change the panel's position even easier by
dragging the panel from one border to the other.
The panel's size can be tiny, small, medium or large. Depending on which
applets you use you may find that some applets work better at different panel
sizes.
Depending on your screen resolution you may find that the panel takes away
too much of your precious screen real estate. To save screen space, the panel
offers an auto hide feature. When this feature is enabled, the panel will hide
when the mouse cursor has not been moved over it for a configurable amount of
time. If you move the mouse to the panel's screen border it will show up
again. Check the Enable automatic hide option in the
Automatic Hide frame to enable this feature. Using the
Delay in seconds slider you can configure the amount of
time the panel will wait before it hides.
Preferred terminal application is the default
terminal program to be used by the QuickBrowser when you select Open
in Terminal. It's very likely you don't need to change this
option.
Look & Feel
Using the Look & Feel tab you can configure the
panel's overall appearance.
When the panel's hide buttons are enabled you'll see buttons on both sides
of the panel, with arrows showing to the screen border. If you click on one of
these buttons, the panel will slide away in that direction. After that, you'll
see a remaining show button in that corner, which will make the panel show
again. Check the Enable hide buttons option to enable this
feature. Using the slider you can change the width of the buttons.
Using the Manual Hide Animation (for the hide
buttons) and Auto Hide Animation (for the auto hide
functionality) options you can configure whether the panel will softly slide
away or just disappear. You can enable or disable both animations using the
Enable options and you can change the speed of the
animation using the sliders.
The Background Image is a picture that will be used
to draw the panel's background, just like you can use a picture for the desktop
background. Check the Enable background image option to
enable this feature. You can specify an image file in the line edit box below or
choose one by clicking on the Browse button. You'll see a
preview of the selected picture on the right.
Buttons
The &kde; panel supports so-called tiled buttons
. This means
that the buttons shown on the panel will be drawn using configurable images. To
enable button tiling, check the Enable background tiles
option in the Buttons tab. Then you can configure tiles for
certain kinds of buttons.
For every kind of panel button there's a frame offering an
Enabled option to enable or disable tiled images. If tiles
are enabled for this kind of button, you can choose a tile in the combo box
below and the box on the right will show a preview of this tile.
Applets
Applets are small plugins that extend the pager's functionality. &kde;
comes with some applets but they may be provided by third parties as well.
Panel applets can be started using two different ways: internal or
externally. While internal
is the preferred way to load applets,
this can raise stability or security problems when you are using
poorly programmed third-party applets. To address these problems, applets
can be marked trusted
. You might want to configure the panel to
treat trusted applets different from untrusted ones. Your options
are:
Load only trusted applets internal:
All applets but the ones marked trusted
will be loaded using an
external wrapper application.
Load startup config applets internal:
The applets shown on &kde; startup will be loaded internally, others
will be loaded using an external wrapper application.
Load all applets internal: will load
all applets internally, regardless of whether they're trusted or not.
For stability and security reasons, we recommend using one of the first
two options and that you mark only those applets as 'trusted' that come with the
&kde; base packages.
To mark applets trusted
or untrusted
you can
move them from one of the shown listboxes to the other. Just try selecting an
applet in the list of trusted applets and click the
>> button. This will move the selected applet to
the other list, while clicking the << button will
move the selected applet of the list of available applets to the list of trusted
ones.
Section Author
This section written by: Jost Schenck jost@schenck.de
Minor update by Mike McBride mpmcbride7@yahoo.com