SuperKaramba

SuperKaramba is a tool, a so-called widget engine, that allows the creation of functionality enhancement modules (desktop widgets) on the KDE desktop. The desktop widgets are usually embedded directly into the background and do not disturb the normal view of the desktop. The use of SuperKaramba is not limited to KDE, but certain libraries from KDE are required. SuperKaramba had been included in KDE since version 3.5. SuperKaramba is similar to gDesklets for GNOME. The name derives from Portuguese and Spanish super caramba, meaning approximately "super wow" or "super cool" (caramba itself being a euphemism for carallo).

SuperKaramba
SuperKaramba theme Aero AIO
Developer(s)SuperKaramba project
Operating systemLinux
PlatformKDE
Type
  • Widget engine
  • Linux on the desktop
LicenseGNU General Public License
Websiteutils.kde.org/projects/superkaramba/

Together, Kicker, KDesktop and SuperKaramba build the graphical shell of the K Desktop Environment 3. In KDE Software Compilation 4, Kicker, KDesktop, and SuperKaramba were replaced by KDE Plasma 4.[1] The graphical shells KDE Plasma 4 and KDE Plasma 5 being widget engines of their own, SuperKaramba is no longer necessary and e.g. "Kicker" was re-implemented as such a desktop widget.

How it works

Screenshot of WikipediaSearch theme

Authors use text files to create themes that define their widget. They then have the option of adding a Python, Ruby or JavaScript script to make the widget interactive.

Possible uses

Screenshot of LiquidWeather
  • Interactive weather forecasts
  • Control and announcement of MP3 playing with XMMS or Amarok
  • Calendar and notes
  • Original clocks
  • System monitor for CPU, network, non-removable disks
  • Notification of new messages in mailboxes
  • News tickers and RSS aggregators
  • Animated menu bars
  • Custom toolbars
  • Search tools

History

Karamba was originally written by Hans Karlsson as a school project in March 2003.[2] It gained a lot of popularity when it was uploaded to KDE-Look[3] and people began writing themes for it. Karamba only functioned on text files that were written with pseudo-xml format. It became so popular so quickly that Hans had to hand over the project to others who had time to expand upon what he had begun.

By the end of April 2003, Adam Geitgey[4] took over maintenance of the project. He added python scripting support to karamba, which is where it took on a new name, SuperKaramba. Adam kept the project alive, added new features and applied patches from other developers until around April 2005. At that point, a group of developers who wanted to move SuperKaramba even further pushed to get it included in a KDE major release.

SuperKaramba was integrated into KDE 3.5[5] as part of the kdeutils package, and some of the ideas that it presents have become part of KDE 4’s desktop and panel interface called Plasma, which also has support for the SuperKaramba widgets.

Notes and references

  1. Milestone 4: The Desktop Archived 2006-01-03 at the Wayback Machine
  2. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2005-12-10. Retrieved 2005-12-11.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) (Broken link)
  3. Karamba KDE-Look.org
  4. ageitgey's profile KDE-Look.org
  5. KDE Developer's Corner - KDE 3.5 Feature Plan Archived 2005-12-16 at the Wayback Machine
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gollark: A *lot*.
gollark: There is a lot of regulation and safety surrounding stuff.
gollark: No it's not.
gollark: I mean, in the absence of some immediate shock to the system people will just stick with the existing "NuClEaR BaD" opinions.
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