Activities/XoEditor

From Sugar Labs
Jump to navigation Jump to search

XOEditor-icon.svg

About XOEditor

XOEditor is an Activity that can be used to create different color combinations for the XO icon at the heart of the Sugar interface.

Using XOEditor

XOEditor.png

You launch XOEditor from the Home View by clicking on the Activity icon. Once the activity has opened, you will see an XO icon in the center of the screen surrounded by colored circles. The circles are color "stroke-fill" combinations. By clicking on a circle, the XO icon takes on those colors. You can save a selected color combination using the Save Button on the Main Toolbar.

Did you know that as of Version 3, XOEditor will save your colors?
Did you know that you need to restart Sugar in order to load the new colors?
Did you know that you can drag the dots around on the screen? The repositioned dots are saved to the Sugar Journal and will be restored when you relaunch the Activity.

The toolbars

XOEditor-toolbar.png

On the Main Toolbar, from left to right:

The Activity Toolbar button
Used to open the Activity toolbar
The Save Button
Used to save the currently selected colors as your new activity colors
The standard Stop Button
Used to exit the Activity

Alerts

XOEditor-toolbar-confirm.png

XOEditor-toolbar-notify.png

XOEditor uses the Sugar alert system to:

  1. confirm that you really do want to save the new colors you have selected; and
  2. to alert you to the fact that the new colors will only be loaded upon a restart of Sugar.

Dragging the dots

XOEditor-drag.png

The dots can be dragged across the screen to be organized into different arrangements. These arrangements are saved to the Sugar Journal and restored when you resume the activity.

Where to get XOEditor

The XOEditor Activity is available on the Sugar Labs Activity portal. The source code to XOEditor is available on gitorious.

Where to report problems

You can report bugs and make feature requests on our bug-tracking system (You need to create an account first). To list all open tickets of XOEditor you can use query component=Xoeditor. You are also welcome to leave comments/suggestions on the Talk:Activities/XoEditor page.

A word to educators

While XOEditor is primarily intended to be used as a simple utility for changing the colors in the Sugar interface, it can be used to introduce some color concepts, such as monochrome, complementary colors, and some aspects of color expression.

Example projects/questions:

Can you sort the color dots by hue? e.g., drag the red dots to one region of the screen and the blue dots to another region of the screen. What should you do with the dots that are multicolored?
Can you find color combinations that are "quiet"? "loud"?
Which color combinations do you like? Why?

A word to developers

The original version of XOEditor was written in Javascript and bundled into an instance of Browse. The original XML file is in the wiki. As of Version 3, XOEditor has been rebased to Python.

The XO colors are stored using gconf:

~/.gconf/desktop/user/%gconf.xml
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<gconf>
	<entry name="color" mtime="1333639070" type="string">
		<stringvalue>#00A0FF,#005FE4</stringvalue>
	</entry>
	<entry name="nick" mtime="1333490344" type="string">
		<stringvalue>Walter Bender</stringvalue>
	</entry>
</gconf>

The Python code used to write to gconf:

client = gconf.client_get_default()
client.set_string('/desktop/sugar/user/color', '%s,%s' % (
     self._game.colors[0], self._game.colors[1]))

Suggestions for modification

  • The colors used in XOEditor are from the standand Sugar colors class. An interesting challenge would be to modify the program to use a different list of color pairs. The use case for such a modifcation would be that it would let the learner explore a broader range of color combinations. (The XO colors were chosen to meet a specific, narrow set of criteria: legibility and colorfulness. What are some other criteria?)
  • The original Javascript version of XOEditor let you look at the color pairs on top of different background colors. It would be a nice feature to add to the Python version. The use case for such a modification is that colors appear differently depending upon the context in which they are viewed. This modification would allow the learner to explore the impact of background color on perception.)

Please add your suggestions and/or patches and/or use cases here.

Credits

XOEditor was written and is maintained by User:Walter.