- Rewritten arguments, old arguments still work though.
- Border only when centered option
- Hiding each part of the menu
### Other features
Note: This is an incomplete list, it's just here to give you an idea of what this build has to offer.
- Pango markup support.
- Alpha transparency
- Pywal/.Xresources support
- Grid
- Colored Emoji/Font support
- Highlighting
- Case-insensitive by default
- Padding; useful with patched dwm with barpadding or speedwm.
- Fuzzy-finding
- Preselect support
- Line-height
- History support
### Dependencies
- libX11
- libXrender
- freetype
- libXinerama
- Can be disabled if you don't want/need multi-monitor support.
- tcc compiler (you can swap it out for GCC by passing CC="gcc" to the `make` command if you want)
- Pango (for drawing fonts)
- If you do not want to use pango, consider my [older spmenu build](https://github.com/speedie-de/dmenu)
### Installation (most GNU/Linux distributions)
`emerge dev-vcs/git # Install dev-vcs/git using your favorite package manager`
`git clone https://codeberg.org/speedie/spmenu`
`cd spmenu/`
`make clean install # Run as root.`
### Installation (Gentoo)
If you are on Gentoo GNU/Linux, you can add
[my overlay](https://codeberg.org/speedie/speedie-overlay) which includes
`x11-misc/spmenu` as well as other useful packages.
### .Xresources values
This build allows you to define .Xresources values to load on startup. See docs/example.Xresources for a list of default values.
### Scripts
This build of spmenu should work with all spmenu scripts. [Here](https://codeberg.org/speedie/speedwm-extras) are a few I've written/use:
### Notes for users of Arch
This fork of spmenu is compiled using tcc for speed however tcc from the Arch repositories seems to be broken. I'm sure there's a better way to fix this but I just fix it by installing [this package](https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/tcc-ziyao) from the AUR.
### Notes for GCC users
If you're compiling with GCC, chances are you're seeing a lot of warnings.
This is because we're compiling with -Ofast. I can't seem to find any issues
with using -Ofast but if it bothers you, you can compile
with -Os or -O2 which don't spit out these warnings.