from i3pystatus import Status status = Status(standalone=True) # Displays clock like this: # Tue 30 Jul 11:59:46 PM KW31 # ^-- calendar week status.register("clock", format="%a %-d %b %X ",) # Shows the average load of the last minute and the last 5 minutes # (the default value for format is used) status.register("load") # Shows your CPU temperature, if you have a Intel CPU status.register("temp", format="{temp:.0f}°C",) # The battery monitor has many formatting options, see README for details # This would look like this, when discharging (or charging) # ↓14.22W 56.15% [77.81%] 2h:41m # And like this if full: # =14.22W 100.0% [91.21%] # # This would also display a desktop notification (via D-Bus) if the percentage # goes below 5 percent while discharging. The block will also color RED. # If you don't have a desktop notification demon yet, take a look at dunst: # http://www.knopwob.org/dunst/ status.register("battery", format="{status}/{percentage:.2f}% {remaining:%E%hh:%Mm}", alert=True, alert_percentage=5, status={ "DIS": "↓", "CHR": "↑", "FULL": "=", },) status.register("backlight", format="☀ {percentage}%", backlight="intel_backlight", ) # Displays whether a DHCP client is running status.register("runwatch", name="DHCP", path="/var/run/dhclient*.pid",) # Shows the address and up/down state of eth0. If it is up the address is shown in # green (the default value of color_up) and the CIDR-address is shown # (i.e. 10.10.10.42/24). # If it's down just the interface name (eth0) will be displayed in red # (defaults of format_down and color_down) # # Note: the network module requires PyPI package netifaces status.register("network", interface="enp3s0", format_up="{v4cidr}",) # Note: requires both netifaces and basiciw (for essid and quality) status.register("network", interface="wlp0s20u9", format_up="{essid} {quality:03.0f}%",) # Shows disk usage of / # Format: # 42/128G [86G] status.register("disk", path="/", format="{used}/{total}G [{avail}G]",) # For /home status.register("disk", path="/home", format="{used}/{total}G [{avail}G]",) # Shows pulseaudio default sink volume # # Note: requires libpulseaudio from PyPI status.register("pulseaudio", format="♪{volume}",) status.register("spotify", format="{artist} - {title}",) status.run()