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-rw-r--r--docs/usermanual/calendar.sgm2
-rw-r--r--docs/usermanual/contacts.sgm2
-rw-r--r--docs/usermanual/embeddedkonsole.sgm4
-rw-r--r--docs/usermanual/gettingaround.sgm12
-rw-r--r--docs/usermanual/i18n.sgm183
-rw-r--r--docs/usermanual/installation.sgm14
-rw-r--r--docs/usermanual/irda.sgm4
-rw-r--r--docs/usermanual/keypebble.sgm2
-rw-r--r--docs/usermanual/software.sgm8
-rw-r--r--docs/usermanual/today.sgm22
-rw-r--r--docs/usermanual/todo.sgm2
-rw-r--r--docs/usermanual/upgrading.sgm8
-rw-r--r--docs/usermanual/usermanual.sgm7
-rw-r--r--docs/usermanual/whatisopie.sgm10
14 files changed, 199 insertions, 81 deletions
diff --git a/docs/usermanual/calendar.sgm b/docs/usermanual/calendar.sgm
index 99a810c..d8df4c6 100644
--- a/docs/usermanual/calendar.sgm
+++ b/docs/usermanual/calendar.sgm
@@ -99,101 +99,101 @@ The main view is divided up into a grid, where the columns are the days of the
week, and the rows are the weeks (just like an ordinary calendar). The currently
selected day has a bold box drawn around it, and if the day has an appointment,
there will be a small blue square in the bottom right corner of it (that square
will have a smaller white square if it is a recurring appointment). If the
appointment is an all day event, it will be drawn as a green dot instead. When
you click on the sqaure of a day, you will be taken to the day view for that
day.
</para>
</section>
</section>
<section><title>Adding Appointments</title>
<para>
To add an appointment, click on the add appointment button in the toolbar at the
top of the window (an image of a blank page), and a dialog will open up,
allowing you to enter information about the appointment (depending on the
current view, and what you may have selected, there may be certain default
settings).
</para>
<para>
At the top of the window is the description field, where you can enter in a
short description of the appointment, or select a common one from the dropdown
list. The location field allows you to do the same. The category dropdown allows
you to assign the appointment to a category, which you can use later to view
only some of your appointments. The button labeled "..." to the right of that
will open up a dialog where you can add, delete, or edit certain categories.
</para>
<para>
To enter a start and end time, select the date for each from the dropdown menu,
and then you can either manually enter a time, or you can use the three rows of
numbers to more quickly enter it in. To use the fast input method, first click
in the text entry field of the time you want to edit, then you need to select
the hour. The first two rows are the hours, click whichever one you want. The
third row of numbers are the minutes, in units of five. When you select the
minutes field for the start time, it will automatically set the minutes field
for the end time to the same thing, but you can change this by selecting the end
field and giving it its own minutes field. Because of this, it is fastest to set
the start time first and then the end time. There is also an "all day"
checkbox, which will make the appointment take up the entire day.
</para>
<para>
Underneath this you can set the timezone of the appointment from the dropdown
list. To change the available timezones, click the world icon, and it will open
the City Time application. Refer to its documentation for changing the
timezones. If you want to have an alarm go off, check the "alarm" checkbox,
and then set the number of minutes before the appointment that you want the
alarm to sound. If you set the dropdown list next to that to "silent" you will
only be given a visual alarm, wheras if you set the alarm to "Loud", there
will be an alarm sound as well. Note: opie-alarm must be installed for alarms to
work.
</para>
<para>
To set whether the appointment repeats, click the "Repeat" button and a new
dialog will open up. At the top is a row of buttons, which lets you set how
often the appointment repeats. Selecting one of these buttons will change the
interface below, to represent the available options for that type of repetition
(selecting "None" will turn off repetition if you turned it on and no longer
want it). When you are done, click "ok" in the upper right to select that type
of repetition, or "x" to set it back to what it was (none if it is a new
appointment).
</para>
<para>
Finally, you can add notes to the appointment by clicking the "Notes..."
button which will open a dialog with a text entry field for adding notes. Press
"ok" to accept the changes to the notes, "x" to cancel.
</para>
<para>
When you are done setting up the appointment, click "ok" in the top right of
the window, or "x" to cancel adding the appointment.
</para>
</section>
<section><title>Editing Appointments</title>
<para>
How you start editing an appointment varies depending on what view you are in,
but they will all open the same dialog. The dialog is the same as the Add
Appointment dialog, except that the fields will already be filled in with the
information that the appointment contains. Clicking "ok" will keep your
changes, "x" will revert them to what they were before you edited them.
</para>
</section>
<section><title>Finding Appointments</title>
<para>
To find a specific appointment, click the find button in the toolbar (small
green magnifying glass) and it will open a find dialog. Here you can enter the
text you want to search for, as well as the category you want to search for, as
well as the start date, and whether you want the search to be case sensitive.
Click "Find" to find the next appointment that matches your criteria.
</para>
</section>
<section><title>Beaming Appointments</title>
<para>
To beam an appointment to another device using the IrDA and OBEX protocols, you must first install the IrDA
Applet and enable IrDA with it (see <xref linkend=irda>). Then select the appointment that you would like to
-send in the Day View, and select Beam from the menu that appears. Opie will then send the appointment to any
+send in the Day View, and select Beam from the menu that appears. &opie; will then send the appointment to any
waiting device.
</para>
</section>
</chapter>
diff --git a/docs/usermanual/contacts.sgm b/docs/usermanual/contacts.sgm
index 8ba7674..b0afe73 100644
--- a/docs/usermanual/contacts.sgm
+++ b/docs/usermanual/contacts.sgm
@@ -1,108 +1,108 @@
<chapter><title>Contacts</title>
<para>
Contacts is a way to keep track of all the people you know, and how to contact
them. as well as other information, such as their birthday, the company they
work for, etc.
<para>
<section><title>Adding Contacts</title>
<para>
To Add a user, go to
<GUImenu>Contact</GUImenu>&arrow;<GUIMenuItem>Add</GUIMenuItem>,
or click the add icon in the toolbar (looks like a blank piece of paper).
First, you need to give the person a name. You can do this by either entering
their name in the name field, or by pressing "Full Name...", which will open
up a new dialog that lets you enter each part of their name individually. Three
of the entry fields have pulldown menus instead of labels that let you set which
parameter these input fields control. The File As field lets you control how
their name is displayed in the main view, use the pulldown arrow to select from
some common ways of ordering their first and last names, or type in a custom
one. You can also select a category for the user to be filed under, and clicking
the button labeled "..." lets you edit the available catagories (these are
convinient for displaying just the contacts you want when you have a lot of
them).
</para>
<para>
The address tab lets you edit the contact's buisness and home addresses (select
which one you want to change from the pulldown menu at the top). The bottom
field behaves just like the three custom fields in the "General" tab (and if
you select the same thing from the pulldown list, it will modify the same
parameter).
</para>
<para>
The Details tab is used for miscelaneous things like the person's position, the
name of their spouse, etc.
</para>
<para>
When you are done, click "Ok" in the top right of the screen (you can always
edit their profile later), click the "x" to cancel, and not add the contact.
</para>
</section>
<section><title>Editing Contacts</title>
<para>
To edit the contacts, select the person you want to edit, anc click the pencil
icon, or go to <GUIMenu>Contact</GUIMenu>&arrow;<GUIMenuItem>Edit</GUIMenuItem>,
and it will open up the same dialog used to add a user, except their information
that is already entered will already be filled in. To finalise the changes,
click "Ok", or to cancel them, click "x".
</para>
</section>
<section><title>Deleting Contacts</title>
<para>
To delete a contact, select the person from the list of contacts, and click the
trash can icon, or go to <GUIMenu>Contact</GUIMenu>
&arrow;<GUIMenuItem>Delete</GUIMenuItem>. A dialog will pop up asking if you
want to actually delete that contact, click yes to delete it, no will cancel.
</para>
</section>
<section><title>Editing Contacts</title>
<para>
To find a specific person, click the find icon (green magnifying glass), or go
to <GUIMenu>Contact</GUIMenu>&arrow;<GUIMenuItem>Find</GUIMenuItem>. A dialog
will pop up, and in the "Find what" input, enter the string you want to search
for. You can also select if you want the search to be case sensative, and if you
want it to search backwards from the currently selected user. The Category drop
down menu lets you search only a specific category ("All" to search all of
them). When you click "Find", it will start search for the string in all the
fields in all the contacts. When it finds a match, it will highlight the user in
the main view. You can use this to search for (as an example) who a certain
phone number belongs to, by entering the phone number in the "find what" field,
and clicking "Find".
</para>
</section>
<section><title>Viewing Contacts</title>
<para>
To view only the contacts in a certain category, go to the View menu, and check
the categories you want to view.
</para>
<para>
The list of letters on the bottom of the window lets you look at only the
contacts who's names begin with that letter. These work much like entering text
on a mobile phone. For example, to view all the contacts whos name starts with
"B", press the "ABC" group twice (since "B" is the second letter in that
group). To go back to displaying all of the letters, click it two more times
(pressing it four times brings you back to all the letters, so you pressed it 2
times to get to "B" and 2 more times to get back to all letters. 2+2=4).
</para>
</section>
<section><title>Beaming Contacts</title>
<para>
To beam a contact to another device, you must first have the IrDA Applet installed, and you must enable IrDA in it.
(see <xref linkend=irda>). Once this is done, you can select the contact you would like to beam, and press the
-beam icon in the toolbar, or select Contact&arrow;Beam Entry. Opie will then send the contact using the IrDA and
+beam icon in the toolbar, or select Contact&arrow;Beam Entry. &opie; will then send the contact using the IrDA and
OBEX protocols to any waiting device.
</para>
</section>
<section><title>Personal Details</title>
<para>
Change your personal details by going to <GUIMenu>Contact </GUIMenu>
<GUIMenuItem>My Personal Details</GUIMenuItem>. This is used in today to
display who the device belongs to, as well as other apps.
</para>
</section>
</chapter>
diff --git a/docs/usermanual/embeddedkonsole.sgm b/docs/usermanual/embeddedkonsole.sgm
index 838e705..1564408 100644
--- a/docs/usermanual/embeddedkonsole.sgm
+++ b/docs/usermanual/embeddedkonsole.sgm
@@ -1,163 +1,163 @@
<chapter><title>Embedded Konsole</title>
<para>
-EmbeddedKonsole is Opie's terminal emulator. From here you can do pretty much
+EmbeddedKonsole is &opie;'s terminal emulator. From here you can do pretty much
anything (since Linux is actually a command line based OS by itself). I will
not go into much detail on using the linux command line, as that is covered in
many other places (http://www.tldp.org is a good place to start, or read
O'Reilly's <citation>Running Linux</citation> for a comprehensive look at Linux
for the beginner). I will, however, give a quick overview of using a Linux
shell.
</para>
<section><title>Using Embedded Konsole</title>
<para>
Along the top of the window is a row of menus and icons. The "Font" menu lets
you select the font size that you want the console to use, while the Options
menu lets you select various options. Below this row of menus and icons is a
pulldown list with various common commands in it.
</para>
<section><title>Options Menu</title>
<para>
The first submenu in the options menu is the "Command List" menu, which lets
you edit or hide the command list pulldown. The "Tabs on top" or "Tabs on
bottom" (depending on which is currently enabled) allows you to select where
the tabs representing multiple terminal sessions are drawn. The "Colors"
submenu lets you select from a color scheme, or make your own, and the "Scroll
Bar" submenu lets you select where or if the scroll bar is drawn.
</para>
</section>
<section><title>Icons</title>
<para>
The row of icons to the right of the menus allows you to type common keystrokes
without having an input method visible, as well as some other things.
</para>
<para>
The icon all the way on the left will open a new terminal session in a new tab,
while the icon all the way on the right will paste text from the clipboard into
the terminal.
</para>
<para>
The other icons are the same as typing (from left to right) enter, space, tab
(for tab completion), up, and down (for the command history).
</para>
</section>
<section><title>Command List</title>
<para>
The command list is a pulldown menu with a list of commonly used commands.
Selecting one will type the command into the terminal wherever the cursor is.
You can edit or hide this menu from <GUIMenu>Options</GUIMenu>&arrow;
<GUIMenuItem>Command List.</GUIMenuItem>
</para>
</section>
</section>
<section><title>What is a Shell</title>
<para>
A shell is a program that accepts input from a user, and runs commands. Each
"command" in the shell is actually a separate program (unless you are using a
shell like BusyBox, which makes some of the more common commands part of its own
program in order to save space). Shells can actually be very powerful, and many
of them allow you to write something called "shell scripts" which are just a
sequence of commands, sometimes with some flow control statements, saved to a
file and run each time the script is run. For the most part, the average user
-does not need to know about any of this, though. If you are running Opie on the
+does not need to know about any of this, though. If you are running &opie; on the
Familiar distribution, it is advisable to install the bash shell (ipkg install
bash) because it offers things like tab completion, use of the backspace key,
and a command history, as well as offering a more advanced scripting languauge
than most other shells.
</para>
</section>
<section><title>Running Programs</title>
<para>
To run a program or a command (remember, a command is just another program), you
simply type the name of the program and hit "Return" (in Linux, program names
do not have a special suffix like they do in windows, in fact the "."
character has no special meaning unless it is at the begining of a filename, in
which case it makes the file "hidden"). When you type a program name and hit
"Return" the shell looks in a special list of directories called your
"path", and if it cannot find it in any of those directories, it stops looking
and tells you it could not find them. If you want to run a program that is not
in your path, you must specify an absolute or relative path to that program.
For instance, to run a program that is in the directory you are currently in,
you would type <literal>./program</literal> ("./" is a special directory that
is explained below), or to run a program in /home/username/ you would call
<literal>/home/username/program</literal>.
</para>
<para>
Most programs take "arguments" when run from the command line. An argument is
a string that contains no spaces that changes how the program behaves (a text
editor, for instance, might take a single argument, which would be the name of
the file you wish to edit). Usually, you can use the arguments "-h" or
"--help" to get a list of the common arguments that that program takes, along
with a short usage description, and a short description of what each argument
does.
</para>
</section>
<section><title>Basic Navigation</title>
<para>
The command that you will use most often in the shell is probably the "cd"
command, which stands for "change directory." With this command, you can move
around in the file system, by issuing the command like this: <userinput>cd
<replaceable>[new directory]</replaceable></userinput>, where <replaceable>[new
directory]</replaceable> is the directory you want to move to.
This directory name does not have to include the entire directory structure, but
can be "relative" which means it assumes you are talking about directories
relative to the directory you are in. For example, if you are in a directory
called /home/username and you want to move to the directory
/home/username/other/dir you could simply type <userinput>cd
other/dir</userinput> and you would end up in /home/username/other/dir. You can
also specify a full, or "absolute" path, by specifying the entire path name
starting with / ( / is a special directory called the "root" directory, and does
not have a "parent" directory, which means that it is not in any other
directory). There are also two special directories called "./" and "../".
The "./" directory is the current directory you are in, and you will probably
never use this in conjunction with the cd command (why would you want to move to
the directory you are already in?). The "../" directory represents the parent
directory of the directory you are currently in, so if you are in
/home/username, ../ is the same as /home. You can string several ../'s
together, so if you are in /home/username/dir/ ../../ represents /home. There
is one other special directory, called "~/" that points to your home
directory (usually /home/username or /root for the root user).
</para>
</section>
<section><title>Moving Files</title>
<para>
To move files around, you need to use the "cp" (copy) and "mv" (move)
commands. Both of these are run the same way: <userinput>command originalfile
newfile</userinput>. The only difference is that cp creates a new file without
touching the old one, while mv deletes the original file. The two path names
can be either absolute or relative. If you only specify a directory for the
destination, and no filename, it will use the filename for the original file.
</para>
</section>
<section><title>Deleting Files</title>
<para>
To delete a file, run the "rm" command, and to delete a directory, run the
"rmdir" command, each of them take the file to be removed as their only
argument. The rmdir command requires the directory to be empty, so if you want
to delete a directory that is not empty, along with all its contents, run
<userinput>rm -r dir</userinput>.
</para>
</section>
<section id=symlink><title>Linking Files</title>
<para>
In Linux, you can have a special file called a "symbolic link" that acts just
like a copy of another file, except it takes up less space. This is convinient
if two applications are looking for the same file in two separate places,
because the file can be in both places at once, without taking up any extra
space, and any change to one is automatically applied to the other (really,
there is only one file, the link is just a file pointing to the original file).
This is also useful for naming applications independant of their version number.
For instance, you could have a link called "application" that points to
"application1.0". To create a link, use the following command:
<userinput>ln -s originalfile link</userinput>.
</para>
diff --git a/docs/usermanual/gettingaround.sgm b/docs/usermanual/gettingaround.sgm
index 88103bb..90aa3cf 100644
--- a/docs/usermanual/gettingaround.sgm
+++ b/docs/usermanual/gettingaround.sgm
@@ -1,96 +1,96 @@
-<chapter><title>Using Opie</title>
+<chapter><title>Using &opie;</title>
<para>
-Now that Opie is installed and running, it's time to start using it. When you
-first start Opie, you will see the "Launcher" from which you can start all of
+Now that &opie; is installed and running, it's time to start using it. When you
+first start &opie;, you will see the "Launcher" from which you can start all of
your Applications, and the "Taskbar" along the bottom, where you can see all
the running applications, select an input method, and interact with the
installed "applets".
</para>
<section><title>Getting Around</title>
<para>
-Getting around in Opie is very easy, you simply click your stylus on whatever
+Getting around in &opie; is very easy, you simply click your stylus on whatever
icon or button you want to click on. The main difference between using the
stylus and using a mouse is that you cannot right click with a stylus, so things
that require a right click are kept to a minimum. However, it is sometimes
necessary to right click, and this is implemented with a "press and hold".
Any time you want to do something that you think would require a right click on
a normal pc, try pressing the stylus down and holding it still for a few
seconds. This usually opens up a context sensative menu, much like a right
click usually does on a desktop interface.
</para>
</section>
<section><title>Launcher</title>
<para>
The Launcher behaves like the "desktop" on most PC GUIs. When no applications
are running or visible, you will have access to the Launcher. You can also map
a hardware key to bring the Launcher to the top without closing any of the
running applications (this is similar to "minimising" all the applications
that are running).
</para>
<para>
Along the top of the Launcher you will see a list of tabs which function as
categories for your applications. You can click on the tab for the category you
want to view, and then click on the icon for the application that you wish to
launch. By default, there will be an Applications tab and a Settings tab (if
you install any games, they will appear in the Games tab). When new
applications are installed, they will usually appear in one of these three tabs,
or in a tab of their own. To add or delete tabs or to move applications between
the tabs, you can use the Tab Manager application, or you can edit them by hand,
by changing the directories in /opt/QtPalmtop/apps.
</para>
<para>
There is also a tab to the far right called the "Documents" tab, which allows
you to quickly open your most often used documents. You can click on a document
to open it up in the proper application. For help on adding files to the
Documents tab see the <xref linkend="adddoc">.
</para>
</section>
<section><title>Taskbar</title>
<para>
-Opie has a "Taskbar" that always runs along the bottom of the screen in Opie,
+&opie; has a "Taskbar" that always runs along the bottom of the screen in &opie;,
except for a few "fullscreen" applications that cover it up. The Taskbar is
what lets you select which input method you would like to use, shows what
applications are running, and is also where the "applets" draw their icons.
On the left of the Taskbar is an "O" button that opens a menu which has an
entry for every tab in the Launcher, allowing you to star an applications
without going back to the Launcher, or quiting the application that you are
running. On the right hand side of the Taskbar, you will probably see a clock
(unless you installed task-opie-minimal), which is actually just another applet
that draws the time instead of an icon.
</para>
<para>
When an application is run, it adds its icon to the Taskbar, starting from the
right side of the input method icon, with new application's icons appearing to
the right. If you click on the icon for an application, it will be brought to
the screen, allowing you to interact with it.
</para>
<para>
To the right of the "O" menu you will see an icon for the currently selected
input method. Clicking this will bring up the input method, allowing you to
type into the currently running application. To the right of the input method
icon is a small arrow pointing up, which will open a menu of all the currently
installed input methods when clicked. When you select one of these, it will
become the current input method, with its icon replacing the previous one.
</para>
</section>
<section><title>Dialogs</title>
<para>
-In Opie, dialogs, as well as some applications, have a button labeled "Ok" on
+In &opie;, dialogs, as well as some applications, have a button labeled "Ok" on
the right side of the window title bar, in addition to the normal "x". For
dialogs, the "Ok" button will apply your changes and close the window, while
the "x" will cancel them before closing the window (for people used to most
desktop GUI's the "Ok" and "x" behave like the "Ok" and "Cancel" buttons
you would normally see in the bottom right of the dialog window).
</para>
<para>
For applications that have an "Ok" button as well as the "x" button that all
applications have, the "Ok" button will usually save the current file and then
close the application, while the "x" button will close the application without
saving.
</para>
</section>
</chapter> \ No newline at end of file
diff --git a/docs/usermanual/i18n.sgm b/docs/usermanual/i18n.sgm
index 1964f50..b1ac33a 100644
--- a/docs/usermanual/i18n.sgm
+++ b/docs/usermanual/i18n.sgm
@@ -1,77 +1,192 @@
-<chapter id=i18n><title>Translations</title>
+<chapter id=i18n>
+<section>
+ <title>Translations</title>
+
<para>
- The OPIE-Project tries to offer the support for as many languages as possible.
- In this chapter the process of translating OPIE and its documentation is explained.
+ The &opie;-Project tries to offer the support for as many languages
+ as possible. In this chapter the process of translating &opie; and its
+ documentation is explained.
</para>
-<section>
- <title>Introduction</title>
<para>
- To ensure that OPIE can be used by as many people as possible the OPIE-project
- aims to be translated in as many languages as possible. Of course, as there are so many
- different languages, there is always a lot work to do. Furthermore, OPIE evolves and thus
- most likely there are translations for applications which should be updated. In this tutorial
- you will learn how to help OPIE to be availeble in as many languages as possible and see how
- easy it is to give something very much respected to the open-source community.
+ To ensure that &opie; can be used by as many people as possible the
+ &opie;-project aims to be translated in as many languages as possible. Of
+ course, as there are so many different languages, there is always a lot
+ work to do. Furthermore, &opie; evolves and thus most likely there are
+ translations for applications which should be updated. In this tutorial
+ you will learn how to help &opie; to be available in as many languages as
+ possible and see how easy it is to give something very much respected to
+ the open-source community.
</para>
</section>
+
<section>
<title>Preferences</title>
+
<para>
- In order to translate for OPIE you need an editor to edit the translationfile
- and preferably access to cvs. The preferred editor is Linguist. That is an application which
- comes with Qt. It has a intuitive GUI and is very easy to use. A tutorial can be found here:
- <link>http://doc.trolltech.com/3.1/linguist-manual-3.html</link>.
+ In order to translate for &opie; you need an editor to edit the
+ translationfile and preferably access to cvs. The preferred editor
+ is Linguist. That is an application which comes with &qt;. It has a
+ intuitive GUI and is very easy to use. A tutorial can be found <ulink
+ url="http://doc.trolltech.com/3.1/linguist-manual-3.html">here</ulink>.
</para>
<para>
- However, you can use every editor which works with UTF8, for example VIM or EMACS. The advantage
- of Linguist is that its GUI is optimized for OPIEs translationfiles and can help you be
- proposing a translation and notice you if there is an error within the translation.
+ However, you can use every editor which works with UTF8, for example VIM or
+ EMACS. The advantage of Linguist is that its GUI is optimized for &opie;s
+ translationfiles and can help you by proposing a translation and notice
+ you if there is an error within the translation.
</para>
<para>
- CVS is a tool which the developers and most translators use to get the source of OPIE. If you
- already have an anonymous account for the OPIE-cvs you should go to $OPIEDIR/i18n and do <code>cvs up</code>.
- If there is already a translation for the language you would like to translate you will see
- the language code in that directory. For example, for german this is <code>de</code> and for danish
- it is <code>da</code>. If not you should contact the coordinator Carsten Niehaus so that
- everything will be set up for your language.
+ CVS is a tool which the developers and most translators use to get the source
+ of &opie;. If you already have an anonymous account for the &opie;-cvs you
+ should go to <filename class='directory'>OPIEDIR/i18n</filename> and do
+ <programlisting>cvs up</programlisting>. If there is already a translation for the language you would like to
+ translate you will see the language code in that directory. For example,
+ for german this is <programlisting>de</programlisting> and for danish it is
+ <programlisting>da</programlisting>. If not, you should contact the coordinator
+ <personname><firstname>Carsten</firstname><surname>Niehaus</surname></personname>
+ so that everything will be set up for your language.
</para>
</section>
+
+<section>
+ <title>Styleguide</title>
+ <para>
+ To ensure a high quality of the translations the translatiors have to keep certain things
+ in mind.
+ </para>
+ <itemizedlist mark='opencircle'>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The applications do not speak to the user. This means that for example it should not
+ be <errortext>I didn't find the file!</errortext> but <errortext>File not found!</errortext>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Try not to use exclamationmarks. If the users sees them to often the ! looses it function
+ as a amplifier of a warning.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Don't put a space in front of a punctuation mark. So write eg "this is a demonstation!" insteadt
+ of "this is a demonstation !".
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </itemizedlist>
+</section>
+
<section>
<title>Examplecode</title>
+
<para>
In the next paragraph you see an example of how the XML looks like.
</para>
- <!--
+
+ <programlisting>
<message>
<source>New</source>
<translation>Neu</translation>
</message>
<message>
<source>Today</source>
<translation>Heute</translation>
</message>
<message>
<source>Day</source>
<translation type="unfinished"></translation>
</message>
- -->
+ </programlisting>
+
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ As you can see the markup is very simple. The part between two source-tags is
+ the english text which appears if there is no translation yet. In the first
+ case this is <quote>New</quote>. The next row is where the translated string
+ would be. The first two messages are already translated, the third is
+ not. This is marked by the <programlisting>type="unfinished"</programlisting>.
</para>
<para>
- As you can see the markup is very simple. The part between two source-tags is the english
- text which appears if there is no translation yet. In the first case this is <quote>New</quote>.
- In the next row is where the translation would be. The first two messages are already translated,
- the third is not. This is marked by the <code>type="unfinished"</code>.
+ If you choose to use an editor like VIM instead of the prefered tool
+ -Linguist- you have to remove that mark and add the translated string
+ between the two <programlisting>translation</programlisting>-tags.
</para>
<para>
- If you choose to use an editor like vim instead of the prefered tool -Linguist- you have to remove
- that mark and add the translated string between the two <code>translation</code>-tags.
+ It might happen that you see <programlisting>type="obsolete"</programlisting> in a
+ .ts-file. You should not translate these stings as they do no longer appear in the
+ application. The translationcoordinator removes those strings from time to time. In
+ Linguist those strings are grey and not translatable.
</para>
</section>
+
+<section>
+ <title>Filetypes</title>
+ <para>
+ As a translator one need to know three different filetypes.
+
+ <filename class='extension'>ts</filename>
+ .ts-files are the most important files for translators. In these files are all strings which
+ need to be translated and the translations themselfs. All .ts-files are located in
+ <filename class='directory'>OPIEDIR/i18n/xx</filename> while xx is a languagecode (eg. de or de).
+ In theory .ts-files are the only ones a translator needs to know.
+
+ <filename class='extension'>pro</filename>
+ Every application has a .pro-file from which the Makefiles are generated. As a translator
+ you need to check if in every .pro-file is a line for the language you would to
+ translate for. A line like this should look this way:
+
+ <programlisting>
+ ../../../i18n/de/today.ts \
+ </programlisting>
+
+ Usually the translationcoordinator takes care of these entries so you should not
+ need to edit them.
+
+ <filename class='extension'>qm</filename>
+ These are binary files used by &opie; to display the translated strings. They are
+ automatically generated by calling the command <command>make lrelease</command>. Of course,
+ you need to have the binary of <application>lrelease</application> which comes with &qt;.
+ </para>
+</section>
+
<section>
<title>Do's and don'ts</title>
+ There are certain things that should only be done be the
+ translationcoordinator or one of the core developers.
+ <itemizedlist mark='opencircle'>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The translationfiles should never be updated by the translators. Only the
+ translationcoordinator updates the repository. This is to avoid merging conflicts.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The binary .qm-files are created by either the translationcoordinator or by the feed-manager.
+ Of course, the translators can created them as described above for testingpurposes but
+ the official files will be provided.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Whenever you find a typo or an incorrect message contact the author of the application
+ and/or use our bugtrackingsystem (Mantis) to make sure this string will be fixed.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If you find a string like "Form1" contact the translationcoordinator. These strings
+ should not be in the translationfiles. You don't need to translate them.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
<para>
- There are certain things that should only be done be the translationcoordinator or one of the
- core developers.
+ If you check you translation and see a not translated string even though you translationfile
+ is 100% translated use the bugtrackingsystem and/or contact the author of that application
+ directly so that this bug is fixed.
</para>
+ </listitem>
+ </itemizedlist>
</section>
+
</chapter>
diff --git a/docs/usermanual/installation.sgm b/docs/usermanual/installation.sgm
index 82834a6..62874bb 100644
--- a/docs/usermanual/installation.sgm
+++ b/docs/usermanual/installation.sgm
@@ -1,67 +1,67 @@
<chapter><title>Installation</title>
<section><title>iPAQ</title>
<para>
To install opie on an iPAQ, you will need a fresh Familiar installation (ie,
install Familiar, and stop before you do ipkg install task-complete or ipkg
install task-x), go to http://familiar.handhelds.org to get the latest version,
and to get installation instructions (again, stop after the initial boot and do
not install X, as it is not necessary, and will only take up space).
</para>
<note>
<para>
If you had qpe/qtopia installed previously,
<emphasis>completely</emphasis> remove it, and remove the src line for it from
your /etc/ipkg.conf file before attempting to install opie.
</para>
</note>
<para>
Once you have Familiar installed, set up a network connection between your iPAQ
and the ouside world (again, see the Familiar site for instructions on this),
and then run this command:
<informalexample>
<literallayout>
echo src opie "http://131.152.105.154/feeds/ipaq/unstable/" \
>> /etc/ipkg.conf
</literallayout>
</informalexample>
then, run:
<informalexample>
<literallayout>
ipkg update && ipkg install task-opie
</literallayout>
</informalexample>
If you have a 3100 or 3800 series iPAQ, run:
<informalexample>
<literallayout>
ipkg install qt-embedded-rotation
</literallayout>
</informalexample>
-finally, start Opie with:
+finally, start &opie; with:
<informalexample>
<literallayout>
/etc/init.d/opie start
</literallayout>
</informalexample>
</para>
<para>
-Opie should now be running (if you should have to reboot, which is rare, Opie
+&opie; should now be running (if you should have to reboot, which is rare, &opie;
will start automatically). From here, you can use either the "Software"
application in the Settings tab, or run ipkg from the command line to install
-other Opie apps. Check out the various task-opie-* ipkgs to install various sets
+other &opie; apps. Check out the various task-opie-* ipkgs to install various sets
of apps at once (you can always uninstall individual apps individually). You
will probably want to install opie-embeddedkonsole first, so you have access to
-the command line in Opie.
+the command line in &opie;.
</para>
</section>
<section><title>Zaurus</title>
<para>
-To completely install Opie on the Zaurus, you will have to install OpenZaurus,
-which includes Opie. However, individual Opie applications will work fine on the
-default Zaurus rom. Do not install Opie's launcher on a default Zaurus ROM
+To completely install &opie; on the Zaurus, you will have to install OpenZaurus,
+which includes &opie;. However, individual &opie; applications will work fine on the
+default Zaurus rom. Do not install &opie;'s launcher on a default Zaurus ROM
though.
</para>
</section>
</chapter> \ No newline at end of file
diff --git a/docs/usermanual/irda.sgm b/docs/usermanual/irda.sgm
index a2f084c..9e58e2d 100644
--- a/docs/usermanual/irda.sgm
+++ b/docs/usermanual/irda.sgm
@@ -1,45 +1,45 @@
<chapter id=irda><title>IrDA Applet</title>
<para>
The IrDA Applet provides a GUI for easilly controlling communication between your device and others using the IrDA
protocol. You can use it to communicate with PalmOS based devices, cell phones, and almost anything else that
can use infra red to communicate.
</para>
<section><title>Starting IrDA</title>
<para>
To start IrDA, click the IrDA Applet icon in the taskbar, and select "Enable IrDA". The icon should then turn red, and
clicking the icon should then bring up a larger menu. If this does not happen, you do not have the IrDA modules installed
properly on you device. Make sure you install the IrDA driver package for the device and distribution that you are using.
</para>
</section>
<section><title>Recieving Files</title>
<para>
If you want to recieve files like images or contact information from another device, you need to tell your device to
start looking for other devices. Do this by clicking on the IrDA Applet icon and selectiong "Enable Discovery". A
green dot should appear in the upper right hand corner of the IrDA Applet icon. Then select "Enable Recieve" from
the applet's menu, and a white box should appear in the bottom left corner of the IrDA Applet's icon. You can then
-have the other device send the file, and Opie should recieve it and open the file in whatever application is
+have the other device send the file, and &opie; should recieve it and open the file in whatever application is
appropriate.
</para>
<para>
When you are done recieving files, you will want to select "Disable Recieve" and "Disable Discovery" from the
IrDA Applet's menu so that you are not wasting system resources.
</para>
</section>
<section><title>Beaming Files</title>
<para>
Several applications support beaming files in a format specific to that application (specifically, Contacts, Calendar,
and Todo). However, sometimes you may need to simply send a file to another device via IrDA, regardless of the
file type. To do this, you can use either AdvancedFM (yet to be documented), or you can do this from the
Documents tab. To beam a file from the Documents tab, you must first add that file to the Documents tab if you
havent already (see <xref linkend="adddoc">). Then, go to the Documents tab and press and hold on the icon for
the file you want to send. A dialog should appear, with a button in the bottom right labeled "Beam". Press this
-button, and Opie will beam the file to any waiting devices.
+button, and &opie; will beam the file to any waiting devices.
</para>
</section>
<section><title>Stoping IrDA</title>
<para>
Sometimes it is necessary to stop IrDA, usually so that you can use the IR port for another application. To do this,
select "Disable IrDA" from the IrDA applet's menu.
</para>
</section>
</chapter> \ No newline at end of file
diff --git a/docs/usermanual/keypebble.sgm b/docs/usermanual/keypebble.sgm
index a4ebfdf..92b3628 100644
--- a/docs/usermanual/keypebble.sgm
+++ b/docs/usermanual/keypebble.sgm
@@ -1,63 +1,63 @@
<chapter><title>VNC Viewer</title>
<para>
-The OPIE VNC Viewer allows you to connect to servers that are compatible with
+The &opie; VNC Viewer allows you to connect to servers that are compatible with
the Remote Frame Buffer (RFB) protocol, most commonly used by the VNC remote
access software.
</para>
<section><title>Adding a bookmark</title>
<para>
To add a new bookmark to your bookmark list, lick the New icon on the
window's toolbar. The "VNC Viewer Connection" dialog will appear. Enter the
hostname or IP address of the computer you would like to connect to in the
"Host Name" field. In the "Display Number" field, enter the number of the
display you would like to connect to. If you are connecting to a Windows or
Mac OS server, you typically select display 0. Unix servers typically use
display 1 or higher. You must also enter the password for the server you
would like to connect to if it requires one. If you are having difficulties
entering the password, you can select "Show Password" to show the password
you are entering. You must also add a descriptive name for the bookmark if
you would like it to be saved. You can then either select the OK button to
save the bookmark and connect to the server, or the cancel button to return
to the bookmark list.
</para>
</section>
<section><title>Connecting to a bookmarked server</title>
<para>
To connect to a server that has already been bookmarked, select the bookmark
from the list and press the "Open" icon on the toolbar. The "VNC Viewer
Connection" dialog will appear, and you will have the chance to modify the
bookmark before actually connecting. Pressing the OK button will connect to
the server, and pressing the cancel button will return to the bookmark list.
</para>
</section>
<section><title>Deleting a bookmark</title>
<para>
To delete a bookmark, choose the bookmark that you would like to delete, and
select the delete item from the toolbar.
</para>
</section>
<section><title>Advanced Connection Options</title>
<para>
In addition to the display number, hostname, and password, you can choose many
advanced options from the "VNC Viewer Connection" dialog box that will affect
the performance of the connection.
</para>
<para>
On the options tab you can set the delay in between requesting updates to the
screen, a higher value will result in a more up to date screen, but you will
use more bandwidth. You can also choose to restrict your connection to 8 bit
color, which is much faster than using the color depth of the remote server
at the cost of image quality. Requesting a shared session tells the RFB server
that you are willing to let other users connect at the same time. You can use
the scaling factor on fit more of the remote screen into the space available on
your PDA, if you are willing to accept the performance hit involved in the
scaling.
</para>
<para>
The Encodings tab allows you to select which of the supported encodings you would
would like the VNC Viewer to use to communicate with the remote server. In most
cases you don't need to modify anything on this tab.
</para>
</chapter>
diff --git a/docs/usermanual/software.sgm b/docs/usermanual/software.sgm
index 8b82118..a0a8264 100644
--- a/docs/usermanual/software.sgm
+++ b/docs/usermanual/software.sgm
@@ -1,199 +1,199 @@
<chapter><title>Software</title>
<para>
The "Software" application, also called oipkg, is what is used to install and
remove software. It is actually a frontend to the command line program "ipkg"
so most things you can do with oipkg you can also do with ipkg. Oipkg can
install things either remotely from a web server (called a "feed") or it can
install an ipkg package file that resides on the local filesystem.
</para>
<important>
<para>
If you are using a version of ipkg lower than 0.99.20 there is a bug that prevents
oipkg from working properly. If you see errors in the installation log about not being
able to kill the old gunzip process, you can get around this by starting oipkg from
Embedded Konsole.
</para>
</important>
<section><title>Installing Software</title>
<para>
There are several way to install a software package, depending on how you are
accessing the package.
</para>
<para>
-To install software from a feed (see <xref linkend=feed>), first select "Opie" from the
+To install software from a feed (see <xref linkend=feed>), first select "&opie;" from the
"Section" pulldown menu, the press the "+" icon next to "Feeds" in the main view.
-This will show all the available Opie packages (you can change which packages
+This will show all the available &opie; packages (you can change which packages
to view by selecting something else from the "Section" pulldown). Installed
packages are marked with a blue circle, while packages that are not installed are marked with a red
box. If you click on the icon for an uninstalled package, it will turn into an
open box, with a blue circle coming out of it, indicating that you have marked
this package to be installed. Mark as many packages as you wish this way, and
then press the "Apply" icon (same red box and blue dot icon) to install all
the marked packages. It will also remove any packages marked for removal (see
below). Clicking this will open a window showing all the packages marked to be
removed and installed, with some check boxes on the bottom, which represent
arguments to be sent to ipkg, which you can usually ignore. After verifying
that all the packages to be installed are correct, press "Ok" in the upper
right corner (or press "x" to cancel and go back to the package selection
window). The packages should then install, and you should see their icons
-appear in the Launcher, if they are Opie applications.
+appear in the Launcher, if they are &opie; applications.
</para>
<para>
If you would like to install software that is not avaialable in a feed, you can
download it to your device, and open Filemanger to the directory that it is in. You
can then press and hold on the file name, and select "Open in Software", and oipkg
will be started, with the package already marked to install. Confirm that it is the
correct package, and check any options that you may need and press "Ok" to install
the package.
</para>
<para>
If you would like to install a package but are not sure where to find it, and it is not in
any of the feeds that you are using, you can try to have oipkg search for it. You can
enter a query in the "Search" field in the toolbars, and then press the magnifying
glass icon. Oipkg will then search a list of feeds as well as some software websites,
and show you all the packages that it thinks might be what you are looking for, and
displays them under the "ipkgfind&amp;killefiz" section in the Package view. You can
then select the packages that you would like to install from that list and install them
as you normally would install packages from a feed.
</para>
</section>
<section><title>Removing Software</title>
<para>
Removing software is the same as installing software, except you will press the
blue circle icon of an installed package, and it will have a red "X" over it.
Then press the apply icon, and "Ok". You can install and remove packages at
the same time by marking the ones you want to install and the ones you want to
remove, and then pressing apply.
</para>
</section>
<section id=feed><title>Servers</title>
<para>
When you install software normally, ipkg downloadins the packages automatically
from ipkg servers (also called "Feeds") and installing them. The list of
servers and where they are is stored in a file called ipkg.conf in /etc/. Oipkg
is capable of maintaining this list, as well as adding or deleting feeds from
it.
</para>
<section><title>Selecting Servers</title>
<para>
To select which feeds you want to be able to see and install packages from, go
to Settings&arrow;Setups. There will be a box with a list of servers in it
called "Used Servers". Servers that are highlighted will be used to install
software from, while servers that are not highlighted will be ignored. You can
click on a server to toggle its status. When a server is disabled, the
information about that server such as its name and location is kept, so that
you can resume using it without having to reenter this data. "Ok" will save the
changes, and "x" will cancel them.
</para>
</section>
<section><title>Adding Servers</title>
<para>
You can add a server to your list of available servers by going to
Settings&arrow;Servers. Click on the button labeled "New" and enter the name
and URL into the appropriate fields at the bottom of the window. The name is
only for your convinience, so name it whatever makes sense to you. The URL is
the URL of the feed, so the URL for the opie feed would be
"http://131.152.105.154/feeds/ipaq/unstable". When you are done, click "Ok" to
save the new server, or "x" to cancel adding it.
</para>
</section>
<section><title>Editing Servers</title>
<para>
To change the URL or name of a server, go to Settings&arrow;Servers, and select
the server that you want to edit. The current Name and URL should appear in the
appropriate fields, and you can change them to the new values. Once you are
done, click "Ok" to save, or "x" to cancel.
</para>
</section>
<section><title>Deleting Servers</title>
<para>
If you no longer need to use a server, this can be done by going to
Settings&arrow;Servers. You can then select the server you wish to delete and
press the "Remove" button. "Ok" will save the deletion, and "x" will cancel it.
</para>
</section>
</section>
<section><title>Destinations</title>
<para>
Software is distributed in a format called "ipkg" which contains all the
necessary files for the program, as well as information on where to put them.
However, this information is only half complete, as it tells the package manager
where in the "destination" to put the files, but the package manager must know
where this "destination" is. The default destination is "/" (called "root") so
if the package says to install a file in opt/QtPalmtop/ then the file will be
installed in /opt/QtPalmtop/. However, if ask the package manger to use a
destination at /mnt/hda/ (this is typically where a compact flash card would be)
then the files will be installed in /mnt/hda/opt/QtPalmtop/.
</para>
<para>
The problem with installing file in a destination other than root is that the
-software usually does not know where to fine the installed files, and Opie does
+software usually does not know where to fine the installed files, and &opie; does
not know where to find the information that tells it how to display the program
in the Launcher. To get around this, the package manager creates links
<footnote><para>See <xref linkend=symlink> for more information on symbolic
links in Linux</para></footnote> from where the files would be if they were
installed in root to where they are actually installed. This means that no more
space is taken up where the files would normally be installed, but any programs
can still find the files where they think they should be.
</para>
<section><title>Using Destinations</title>
<para>
To mark a single package to be installed to a destination other than the default, you
can press and hold on it, and select the destination you would like to use from the
"Install to" menu. That package will then be installed in that destination.
</para>
<para>
To install a group of packages in a destination other than root, go to
Settings&arrow;Setups to open the settings dialog to the Setups tab. From here
you can select the destination you would like to install the package to from the
pulldown menu at the bottom. You will also want to check "Link to root
destination" so that links are properly made. Once you have selected the
destination you want to install the package to, click the dialog's "Ok" button,
and all packages that you mark for install will be installed in the selected feed
(The destination will not be changed for the packages already marked for
installation).
</para>
<para>
You can also change the default destination by checking View&arrow;Destinations
to add the Destination toolbar to your toolbars. You can then select the default
destination from the pulldown menu, as well as use the checkbox to select whether
the packages should be linked to the root destination or not.
</para>
</section>
<section><title>Adding Destinations</title>
<para>
To add a destination, go to Settings&arrow;Destinations to bring up the settings
dialog at the Destinations tab, and press the "New" button to add a new
Destination to the list. The new destination should be highlighted
automatically, and you can then change the name and the URL with the two text
entry fields below it. The name is only for easy display of the destination, so
name it whatever makes the most sense to you. The URL is the location that you
want the destination to have. So, if you want all your software to be installed
under /usr/directory then you would set the URL to that. You can then click
"Ok" to save, or "x" to cancel the changes.
</para>
</section>
<section><title>Editing Destinations</title>
<para>
You can edit a destination by going to Settings&arrow;Destinations and selecting
the destination that you would like to edit. Then you can edit the Name and URL
fields in the same manner as when you added a destination. To save, click "Ok"
or cancel by clicking "x".
</para>
</section>
<section><title>Deleting Destinations</title>
<para>
Deleting a destination is very easy. Go to Settings&arrow;Destinations and
select the Destination that you would like to delete in the dialog that appears.
Press the "Remove" button to delete the destination, and press "Ok" to save the
changes, or "x" to cancel them.
</para>
</section>
</section>
</chapter>
diff --git a/docs/usermanual/today.sgm b/docs/usermanual/today.sgm
index d77921c..4c96af0 100644
--- a/docs/usermanual/today.sgm
+++ b/docs/usermanual/today.sgm
@@ -1,53 +1,53 @@
-<chapter><title>Today</title>
+<chapter><title>&today;</title>
<para>
-The Today application is a convenient way to view both the appointments from the Calendar and the tasks from the
+The &today; application is a convenient way to view both the appointments from the Calendar and the tasks from the
Todo application for the current day, as well as seeing what e-mail is available. It provides no interface for editing your
appointments, or your tasks, but if you click the icon of the application, it will be launched. For those familiar with
-PocketPC, this is similar to the Today application included with that.
+PocketPC, this is similar to the &today; application included with that.
</para>
<section><title>Configuration</title>
<para>
-You can configure the Today application by pressing the wrench icon in the bottom left corner of the window. This will
+You can configure the &today; application by pressing the wrench icon in the bottom left corner of the window. This will
open the configuration dialog, from which you can change various settings related to display, amongst other things.
</para>
<section><title>Calendar</title>
<para>
The Calendar tab in the configuration dialog lets you change the settings for how your appointments should be displayed.
</para>
<para>
The first field allows you to select the number of appointments to be shown in the Calendar section of the application.
If you add more appointments, you will be taking away screen space from the other sections.
The "Should location be shown?" is for determining exactly that. If checked, the location field of the appointment
-will be shown in the Today main view.
+will be shown in the &today; main view.
"Show only later appoinmtnets" will only show appointments that begin after the current time.
Finally, if the "Should the notes be shown" checkbox is checked, then the notes for each appointment will be visible
in the main view.
</para>
</section>
<section><title>Tasks</title>
<para>
-The Tasks tab lets you change how tasks are displayed in the Today main view.
+The Tasks tab lets you change how tasks are displayed in the &today; main view.
</para>
<para>
The first field lets you chose how many tasks to display in the main view. The more that are shown, the more space
is taken from the other categories.
</para>
</section>
<section><title>Miscellaneous</title>
<para>
The Misc. tab allows you to set global settings that affect the entire application.
</para>
<para>
The "Clip after how many letters" field lets you change the number of characters from each appointment or task that
are displayed in the main view. The "Should today be autostarted on resume" checkbox lets you set whether or not
-the Today application should be started each time you resume from a suspend or not.<note><para>This only works
-if you have a full installation of Opie. If you are running Today on some other environment (Qtopia, for example)
+the &today; application should be started each time you resume from a suspend or not.<note><para>This only works
+if you have a full installation of &opie;. If you are running &today; on some other environment (Qtopia, for example)
this feature will not work.</para></note>The final field, "Activate autostart after how many minutes", lets you set
-the number of minutes that the device must be suspended before the Today application will start automatically on
+the number of minutes that the device must be suspended before the &today; application will start automatically on
resume. For instance, if this is set to 5, and you suspend the device for 3 minutes, when you resume the device, the
-Today application will not start automatically. However, if it is set to 5 and you leave the device in the suspend state
-for 6 minutes, then Today will be started automatically upon resume.
+&today; application will not start automatically. However, if it is set to 5 and you leave the device in the suspend state
+for 6 minutes, then &today; will be started automatically upon resume.
</para>
</section>
</section>
</chapter>
diff --git a/docs/usermanual/todo.sgm b/docs/usermanual/todo.sgm
index 18138d9..223de7b 100644
--- a/docs/usermanual/todo.sgm
+++ b/docs/usermanual/todo.sgm
@@ -1,95 +1,95 @@
<chapter><title>Todo</title>
<para>
Todo is designed for storing information about things you need to do, but which
arent going to happen at a specific time, like "change the oil" or "mow the
lawn". You can also give todo items a deadline, if they have to be completed by
a certain time.
</para>
<section><title>Adding Tasks</title>
<para>
Go to <GUIMenu>Data</GUIMenu>&arrow;<GUIMenuItem>New Task<GUIMenuItem>, or click
on the new task icon (blank page). The priority drop down menu lets you select
the priority of the task. The lower the number, the more important it is. The
categories behave in much the same way that they do in Calendar, you can select
the category from the drop down menu, or you can click the "..." button to add,
delete, or edit categories. To give the task a due date, check the "Due"
checkbox, and then click the button next to it (it should contain the current
date). That will open a calendar from which you can select the due date. The
"Completed" check box is the same as the checkbox next to each item in the main
view. The "Summary" field is for a short summary that will be visible in the
main view, as well as in the Today application. The down arrow next to it will
copy the text in the "Summary" field into the large text field below it, which
is used for a more detailed description of the task. Click "ok" in the upper
right to add the new task, or "x" to close the window without adding the new
task.
</para>
</section>
<section><title>Editing Tasks</title>
<para>
To edit a task, you can select it, and then go to
<GUIMenu>Data</GUIMenu>&arrow;<GUIMenuItem>Edit
Task</GUIMenuItem>, or click the edit task icon (an image of a pencil). The same
dialog should apear as if you were adding a task, but the information for that
task should already be filled in. You can change any of it you want to, and then
click "ok" in the top right corner to save the changes, or "x" to go back to
the way it was.
</para>
</section>
<section><title>Deleting Tasks</title>
<para>
To delete a task, first select it, and then either select
<GUIMenu>Data</GUIMenu>&arrow;
<GUIMenuItem>Delete...</GUIMenuItem> or press the Delete icon (an image of
a trash can). A dialog should pop up, asking if you want to delete the task,
click yes to delete it, or no to cancel.
</para>
</section>
<section><title>Finding Tasks</title>
<para>
To find a task, either go to
<GUIMenu>Options</GUIMenu>&arrow;<GUIMenuItem>Find</GUIMenuItem>
, or click the find icon (an image of a green magnifying glass), and a dialog
should pop up. Enter the text you want to search for in the description, and
select the category that you want it to search through (this will speed the
search up, if you know what category it is in). You can also select "case
sensative" which makes the search pay attention to the case of what you type (so
if you look for "mow lawn", it won't find a task called "Mow lawn"). "Search
Backwards" will search backwards from the currently selected task. Click "Find"
to initiate the search, when it finds a task that matches the string, it will
select it. If you click Find again, it will find the next one in the list (or
the previous one, if "Search backwards" is selected).
</para>
</section>
<section><title>Viewing Tasks</title>
<para>
To only view tasks filled under certain categories, go to the Category menu, and
check the categories you want to view. Also, under the Options menu, you can
select whether or not you want completed tasks to be visible, and whether or not
you want to see the deadline.
</para>
</section>
<section><title>Completing Tasks</title>
<para>
To mark a task as completed without deleting it, you can either check the
checkbox next to it in the main view, or edit it, and check the "completed"
check box in the edit dialog. If <GUIMenu>Options</GUIMenu>&arrow;
<GUIMenuItem>Completed<GUIMenuItem> tasks is not checked, the task will
disapear when you mark it completed. but do not worry, it is not gone forever,
just check Completed tasks in the options menu, and you can see and edit it
again.
</para>
</section>
<section><title>Beaming Tasks</title>
<para>
To beam a task to another device using the IrDA and OBEX protocols, you must first install the IrDA
Applet and enable IrDA with it (see <xref linkend=irda>). Then select the task that you would like to and select
-press the Beam icon in the toolbar, or select Data&arrow;Beam. Opie will then send the task to any waiting
+press the Beam icon in the toolbar, or select Data&arrow;Beam. &opie; will then send the task to any waiting
device.
</para>
</section>
</chapter>
diff --git a/docs/usermanual/upgrading.sgm b/docs/usermanual/upgrading.sgm
index 310b99b..787d4dd 100644
--- a/docs/usermanual/upgrading.sgm
+++ b/docs/usermanual/upgrading.sgm
@@ -1,22 +1,22 @@
<chapter><title>Upgrading</title>
<para>
-First, you should shutdown Opie from the "Shutdown" app in the Settings tab.
+First, you should shutdown &opie; from the "Shutdown" app in the Settings tab.
Normally, simply running
<informalexample>
<literallayout>
ipkg update && ipkg upgrade
</literallayout>
</informalexample>
-will upgrade Opie. However, if you currently have a version with the 1.5.0
-version number, you will have to upgrade it differently, because Opie now uses a
+will upgrade &opie;. However, if you currently have a version with the 1.5.0
+version number, you will have to upgrade it differently, because &opie; now uses a
different version number (the 1.5.0 was Qtopia's version number, we now use our
own). To upgrade from one of these older versions, run:
<informalexample>
<literallayout>
ipkg update
ipkg install opie-update
</literallayout>
</informalexample>
-Opie should then be upgraded.
+&opie; should then be upgraded.
</para>
</chapter> \ No newline at end of file
diff --git a/docs/usermanual/usermanual.sgm b/docs/usermanual/usermanual.sgm
index 6adc963..5a7e6c0 100644
--- a/docs/usermanual/usermanual.sgm
+++ b/docs/usermanual/usermanual.sgm
@@ -1,46 +1,49 @@
<!DOCTYPE book PUBLIC "-OASIS//DTD DocBook V4.2//EN" [
<!ENTITY arrow "-->">
<!ENTITY whatis SYSTEM "whatisopie.sgm">
<!ENTITY installation SYSTEM "installation.sgm">
<!ENTITY gettingaround SYSTEM "gettingaround.sgm">
<!ENTITY upgrading SYSTEM "upgrading.sgm">
<!ENTITY contacts SYSTEM "contacts.sgm">
<!ENTITY calendar SYSTEM "calendar.sgm">
<!ENTITY todo SYSTEM "todo.sgm">
<!ENTITY filemanager SYSTEM "filemanager.sgm">
<!ENTITY embeddedkonsole SYSTEM "embeddedkonsole.sgm">
<!ENTITY software SYSTEM "software.sgm">
<!ENTITY today SYSTEM "today.sgm">
<!ENTITY irda SYSTEM "irda.sgm">
<!ENTITY keypebble SYSTEM "keypebble.sgm">
<!ENTITY i18n SYSTEM "i18n.sgm">
+<!ENTITY opie "OPIE">
+<!ENTITY todayapp "Today">
+<!ENTITY qt "Qt">
]>
-<book><title>Opie User Manual</title>
+<book><title>&opie; User Manual</title>
<bookinfo><authorgroup><collab>
-<collabname>The Opie Team</collabname>
+<collabname>The &opie; Team</collabname>
</collab></authorgroup></bookinfo>
<part><title>Getting Started</title>
&whatis;
&installation;
&gettingaround;
&upgrading;
</part>
<part><title>Applications</title>
&contacts;
&calendar;
&todo;
&today;
&filemanager;
&embeddedkonsole;
&keypebble;
</part>
<part><title>Settings</title>
&software;
</part>
<part><title>Applets</title>
&irda;
</part>
<part><title>Technical Details</title>
&i18n;
</part>
</book>
diff --git a/docs/usermanual/whatisopie.sgm b/docs/usermanual/whatisopie.sgm
index 2a51429..e60897c 100644
--- a/docs/usermanual/whatisopie.sgm
+++ b/docs/usermanual/whatisopie.sgm
@@ -1,17 +1,17 @@
-<chapter><title>What is Opie?</title>
+<chapter><title>What is &opie;?</title>
<para>
-Opie is a GUI (Graphical User Interface) for the Linux operating system (and
+&opie; is a GUI (Graphical User Interface) for the Linux operating system (and
might work on other OSes as well). It was originally designed for handheld
computers (such as the Compaq/HP iPAQ and the Sharp Zaurus), but could
probably function well in other environments requiring a light GUI, such as an
-old laptop, or an internet kiosk. It is based upon QT/Embedded from Trolltech,
+old laptop, or an internet kiosk. It is based upon &qt;/Embedded from Trolltech,
which is in turn a graphical environment designed for embedded applications,
-based upon the QT toolkit.
+based upon the &qt; toolkit.
</para>
<para>
-Opie has been designed for devices with small screens, and a touchscreen input
+&opie; has been designed for devices with small screens, and a touchscreen input
device (ie, only one mouse click, and no constant mouse position), as well as
designed to fit in a relatively small amount of storage space (about 5 megabytes
for the base libraries and the launcher).
</para>
</chapter> \ No newline at end of file