Hello! Now that my transceiver sits close to my monitor I started to make real use of xlog. It is a nice and small Unix program and should be sufficient for me. However, there are a couple of peculiarities: For example on Saturday I did some contest QSOs and got one dup response ("we already had a QSO"). The worked before windows showed that QSO but I didn't realized that fast enough. So a better indication is needed to make such things obvious. I did some patches:
1. Change the color of a new callsign when it has been worked. The color is changed on an exact match. It would be better to also indicate a fuzzy match here. The whole thing is pretty important to quickly check whether a station has already been worked; for example in a contest. Using a fixed color is a bit crude but it is a first step for an improved answer-back during data entry. 2. Just one button to set date and UTC to the current time. It does not make sense to be able to set the current time but keep the existing date. Better one button for this. Note that the date can anyway be edited manually to any value. 3. Change the order of fields in the QSO frame Except when typing in old log paper entries or similar, there is no reason that the order must follow the order in the log windows. From a usage point of view the new order seems to be better. For example the band and mode is rarely changed and should thus not get into the way when logging a new QSO. The call and the RSTs should be the first and easiest to enter data. Actually the UTC should even come after the call but I didn't do that because another patch should fill in the UTC at save-time - this is a better for contests. as well as a few supporting changes. My goal is to make xlog ready for real contest use up to a level that it can compete with whatever the other hams in my club are using on Windows. I also looked at fldigi, which is a great set of tools, but given that I am more a C and Gtk+ guy I decided to give xlog a try. Given that I basically lost all my CVS knowledge, I took the Savannah xlog2 repo and imported it into a new Git repository for my local work. You can find it at git://git.gnupg.org/people/wk/xlog.git Now the question is whether you like my changes at all and, if so, how shall I send you the patches? I would also like to discuss possible new features here to see whether my patches make sense for a wider community. The next feature I am looking into is an automatic RST+nnn counter and faster and more safe contest logging options. Salam-Shalom, Werner -- Die Gedanken sind frei. Ausnahmen regelt ein Bundesgesetz.
pgp5SLY7jIPos.pgp
Description: PGP signature
_______________________________________________ Xlog-discussion mailing list Xlog-discussion@nongnu.org https://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/xlog-discussion