1 Linux Infrared Remote Control - use an easy to build home-brewn IR-receiver, an
2 (almost) arbitrary remote control and control your Linux box with it! More
3 about it at www.lirc.org. Be sure to read LIRC documentation before going ahead
6 If you have installed the lirc-package, configure will autodetect it. If LIRC
7 support is enabled and an error occurs Geeqie will tell you on startup. The
8 application name for Geeqie is geeqie. Here is the list of supported commands:
10 DOWN [int] - Move "camera" down by the specified amount. Default=1
12 FIRST - Jump to first image
13 INFO - Show image information (full screen only)
14 LAST - Jump to last image
15 LEFT [int] - Move "camera" left by the specified amount. Default=1
16 NEXT - Go to next image
17 PAUSE - Pause/unpause slideshow
18 PREV - Go to previous image
19 RIGHT [int] - Move "camera" right by the specified amount. Default=1
20 ROTATE_90 - Rotate image 90 degrees clockwise.
21 ROTATE_90_CC - Rotate image 90 degrees counter-clockwise.
22 SET_INV_ZOOM [int] - Zoom to 1/Nx. Default=1x
23 SET_ZOOM [int] - Zoom to Nx. Default=1x
24 UP [int] - Move "camera" up by the specified amount. Default=1
25 ZOOM_IN [int] - Zoom in. Value specifies the amount of zoom.
26 ZOOM_MAX - Zoom to fit image
27 ZOOM_OUT [int] - Zoom out. Value specifies the amount of zoom.
29 Don't forget to enable the repeat flag in .lircrc when it make sense
30 (directional buttons, zoom in and out, ...)
31 Here's an excerpt from my .lircrc:
108 config = ROTATE_90_CC
122 At the moment Geeqie uses the standard location for the lirc-config file
125 LIRC support and documentation by Matteo Beniamino
126 <beniamino@tautologica.org>.
128 (This file is 'inspired' by LIRC documentation from mplayer).