Web development , php , ajax , symfony, framework, zend
In: web resources
19 Mar 2010Typographers are a strange breed, often to be found discussing stems, glyphs and serifs, and going misty eyed at the mention of Helvetica Neue. But they are people too, and people deserve wallpaper that doesn’t sit and stagnate. Perhaps even wallpaper that they like to look at!
So I’ve written a handy little script, to be run from the command line (and only tested on Ubuntu … specifically my own installation of Ubuntu), which will generate and utilise a new wallpaper whenever you like.

The script picks one of a collection of letters (or numbers, or ampersands) you give it to choose from. It then picks a single random font from your computer. Finally, using the colours and dimensions you define, it draws you a nice new wallpaper and tells Gnome to use it.
The script is written in PHP, and can be called from the command line. You can configure the options within the script or pass them as command line arguments. Instructions are in the file.
It requires PHP (command line version) and ImageMagick (probably version 6.3.5-7 or higher). And some fonts.
It looks like this, and you can get the script from here (you’ll need to change the extension to php to get it to run).
If you’ve not got very many fonts, and aren’t sure how to get and install more, check out the Fonts section of the Ubuntu wiki.
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1 Response to Tyopgrapher’s Wallpaper
rml313
March 26th, 2010 at 6:15 am
makes a difference what your planting.If its tomatoes they should be planted with some of the stem in the ground