Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Pop up dialog box on remote computers Post 302144427 by porter on Thursday 8th of November 2007 04:19:01 AM
Old 11-08-2007
Quote:
Originally Posted by deaconf19
I want it to pop up a dialog box letting them know to save work and log out.
What terminals, user interfaces, or client programs are they using?

What work would they have open?
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Displaying a dialog box using terminal commands

Hello, I used the command osascript -e 'tell app "Finder" to display dialog "Hey!"' to display a dialog box..it works fine, it displays a dialog box with 'OK' and 'CANCEL' buttons..i want to get the button returned value how can i do that using terminal command? is there any command to get... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: keshav.murthy@r
1 Replies

2. Web Development

Pop up Confirmation Box

Hi, I was writing a simple web application using Perl -CGI. When users try to do some operations, I wanted like a pop-up confirmation box. Is this possible with Perl-CGI? Thanks in advance. Regards, garric (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: garric
6 Replies

3. Debian

Dialog box in debconf file.

Hi all, I am working with debconf file for packaging the projects. I have used the ". /usr/share/debconf/confmodule" file to do the packaging in debian standard. It worked fine. When ever I am installing the package in apt-get the dialogs are come as I mentioned in the templates file.... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Nila
0 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Script to display a dialog box every 5 seconds

I want to create a script that displays a dialog box every interval of time and exits that loop when a user presses ENTER Any idies? (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: amitlib
4 Replies

5. Red Hat

Authentication Failed Dialog Box on Redhat 4.7

For some reason i cannot login using root or other accounts on my Linux system. When logging in at the main console it says "Authentication failed" in a dialog box with an OK button. The Linux system is Redhat 4.7. I've already checked /etc/pam.d/login, /etc/security/access.conf and ... (27 Replies)
Discussion started by: redhatuser2012
27 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to create multiple input box in same window using dialog

Hi All, I was trying to generate GUI using shell script. After long search I found the utility called “dialog”. Using this utility I am able to generate window to collect the input. dialog --inputbox "Input 1" 10 45 dialog --inputbox "Input 2" 10 45 dialog --inputbox "Input 3" 10 45 Using... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: kalpeer
2 Replies

7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Dialog box

I know, I can run dialog command in my machine. But what I want to do is I wanna show the dialog box to some other Remote host. I connected to the remote system and used dialog command its shows the box in my terminal only. How can I display to that remote machine?? Any suggestions??? (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Adhi
3 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Dialog box in korn shell scripting

Does dialog box works on all kind of shells? I am using korn shell in Linux . For me dialog is not working :) is there any particular syntax or do we need to have particular OS version or shell env? #!/bin/ksh dialog --title "create file" \ --backtitle "shell script practice" \... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: NarayanaPrakash
1 Replies

9. Web Development

Pop up confirmation box / perl cgi

Hi, I need to add confirmation pop up msg box before deleting the record from database, I have added following snippets to my code but its not working for me, your help will be much appreciated : print header; print <<EOF; <script type="text/javascript"> function confirmOk() { return... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: terrykhatri531
0 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Require input in bash dialog box

Hello. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Right now I have the following input box that works fine and well, however I would like to wrap this is a loop that requires input. Right now the script will happily continue on if the user just hits enter. I'd like to require a minimum of a 5... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: woodson2
5 Replies
getOpenFile(3)						User Contributed Perl Documentation					    getOpenFile(3)

NAME
getOpenFile, getSaveFile - pop up a dialog box for the user to select a file to open or save. SYNOPSIS
$widget->getOpenFile(?-option=>value, ...>?) $widget->getSaveFile(?-option=>value, ...>?) DESCRIPTION
The methods getOpenFile and getSaveFile pop up a dialog box for the user to select a file to open or save. The getOpenFile method is usually associated with the Open command in the File menu. Its purpose is for the user to select an existing file only. If the user enters an non-existent file, the dialog box gives the user an error prompt and requires the user to give an alternative selection. If an application allows the user to create new files, it should do so by providing a separate New menu command. The getSaveFile method is usually associated with the Save as command in the File menu. If the user enters a file that already exists, the dialog box prompts the user for confirmation whether the existing file should be overwritten or not. If the user selects a file, both getOpenFile and getSaveFile return the full pathname of this file. If the user cancels the operation, both commands return an undefined value. The following option-value pairs are possible as command line arguments to these two commands: -defaultextension => extension Specifies a string that will be appended to the filename if the user enters a filename without an extension. The default value is the empty string, which means no extension will be appended to the filename in any case. This option is ignored on the Macintosh platform, which does not require extensions to filenames, and the UNIX implementation guesses reasonable values for this from the -filetypes option when this is not supplied. -filetypes => [filePattern ?, ...?] If a File types listbox exists in the file dialog on the particular platform, this option gives the filetypes in this listbox. When the user choose a filetype in the listbox, only the files of that type are listed. If this option is unspecified, or if it is set to the empty list, or if the File types listbox is not supported by the particular platform then all files are listed regardless of their types. See "SPECIFYING FILE PATTERNS" below for a discussion on the contents of filePatterns. -initialdir => directory Specifies that the files in directory should be displayed when the dialog pops up. If this parameter is not specified, then the files in the current working directory are displayed. This option may not always work on the Macintosh. This is not a bug. Rather, the General Controls control panel on the Mac allows the end user to override the application default directory. -initialfile => filename Specifies a filename to be displayed in the dialog when it pops up. This option is ignored by the getOpenFile method. -multiple Allows the user to choose multiple files from the Open dialog. On the Macintosh, this is only available when Navigation Services are installed. -message => string Specifies a message to include in the client area of the dialog. This is only available on the Macintosh, and only when Navigation Services are installed. -title => titleString Specifies a string to display as the title of the dialog box. If this option is not specified, then a default title is displayed. This option is ignored on the Macintosh platform. SPECIFYING FILE PATTERNS
The filePatterns given by the -filetypes option are a list of file patterns. Each file pattern is a list of the form typeName [extension ?extension ...?] ?[macType ?macType ...?]? typeName is the name of the file type described by this file pattern and is the text string that appears in the File types listbox. extension is a file extension for this file pattern. macType is a four-character Macintosh file type. The list of macTypes is optional and may be omitted for applications that do not need to execute on the Macintosh platform. Several file patterns may have the same typeName, in which case they refer to the same file type and share the same entry in the listbox. When the user selects an entry in the listbox, all the files that match at least one of the file patterns corresponding to that entry are listed. Usually, each file pattern corresponds to a distinct type of file. The use of more than one file patterns for one type of file is necessary on the Macintosh platform only. On the Macintosh platform, a file matches a file pattern if its name matches at least one of the extension(s) AND it belongs to at least one of the macType(s) of the file pattern. For example, the C Source Files file pattern in the sample code matches with files that have a .c extension AND belong to the macType TEXT. To use the OR rule instead, you can use two file patterns, one with the extensions only and the other with the macType only. The GIF Files file type in the sample code matches files that EITHER have a .gif extension OR belong to the macType GIFF. On the Unix and Windows platforms, a file matches a file pattern if its name matches at at least one of the extension(s) of the file pattern. The macTypes are ignored. SPECIFYING EXTENSIONS
On the Unix and Macintosh platforms, extensions are matched using glob-style pattern matching. On the Windows platforms, extensions are matched by the underlying operating system. The types of possible extensions are: (1) the special extension * matches any file; (2) the special extension "" matches any files that do not have an extension (i.e., the filename contains no full stop character); (3) any character string that does not contain any wild card characters (* and ?). Due to the different pattern matching rules on the various platforms, to ensure portability, wild card characters are not allowed in the extensions, except as in the special extension *. Extensions without a full stop character (e.g, ~) are allowed but may not work on all platforms. CAVEATS
See "CAVEATS" in Tk::chooseDirectory. EXAMPLE
my $types = [ ['Text Files', ['.txt', '.text']], ['TCL Scripts', '.tcl' ], ['C Source Files', '.c', 'TEXT'], ['GIF Files', '.gif', ], ['GIF Files', '', 'GIFF'], ['All Files', '*', ], ]; my $filename = $widget->getOpenFile(-filetypes=>$types); if ($filename ne "") { # Open the file ... } SEE ALSO
Tk::FBox, Tk::FileSelect KEYWORDS
file selection dialog perl v5.12.1 2007-11-08 getOpenFile(3)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 10:40 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy