Thanks again! In Settings > User interface i changed to "simple interface (libqsui.so)" and restartet qmmp. Again I cant't find "Plugins", as you had mentioned here. Sorry, no idea how to proceed ...
Sorry, I dont understand ... Go to settings -> Plugins -> User Interfaces. Select "Skinned User Interface". I start qmmp and klick settings (CTRL-P). After that I see this , but no selection plugins ....
Thanks, here the desired information: qmmp Version: 2.1.4 Qt 6.5.2 (compiled using Qt 6.5.1) Operating System: Manjaro Linux KDE Plasma Version: 5.27.6 KDE Frameworks Version: 5.108.0 Qt Version: 5.15.10 Kernel Version: 5.15.122-1-MANJARO (64-bit) Graphics Platform: X11 Processors: 16 × AMD Ryzen 7 PRO 4750U with Radeon Graphics Graphics Processor: AMD Radeon Graphics
Problems with Settings > Appearance
Thanks a lot, Luigi. Your code does exactly, what I had in mind; for me this solution is perfect now to create and edit one map in two languages! Furthermore, based on your input I could solve this issue to have a node displaying esp. the date of last edit. For sure, my code is not perfect, but it works ... BTW: Actually I'm learning by example and try / error. Is there any manual or tutorial for this programming? Thanks again and regards Michael
I found a working solution now, but I'm pretty sure, that this could be improved and / or simplyfied. This is what the script does: It checks if there is a node having "Status::" in it's text. If so this node is taken or a new one is added having text (first language =GE) and note (second language = EN, ref. here) to show the number of nodes and date of last modification. For testing, create a new map and run it twice with some time in between. // @ExecutionModes({ON_SINGLE_NODE}) def lastModifiedAt...
I found a working solution now, but I'm pretty sure, that this could be improved and / or simplyfied. This is what the script does: It checks if there is a node having "Status::" in it's text. If so this node is taken or a new one is added having text (first language =GE) and note (second language = EN, ref. here) to show the number of nodes and date of last modification. For testing, create a new map and run it twice with some time in between. // @ExecutionModes({ON_SINGLE_NODE}) def lastModifiedAt...
I found a working solution now, but I'm pretty sure, that this could be improved and / or simplyfied. This is what the script does: It checks if there is a node having "Status::" in it's text. If so this node is taken or a new one is added having text (first language =GE) and note (second language = EN, ref. here) to show the number of nodes and date of last modification. For testing, create a new map and run it twice with some time in between. // @ExecutionModes({ON_SINGLE_NODE}) def lastModifiedAt...