Robert Cernansky wrote:
> Unfortunatelly this is something different. xmm-pipe lets you control
> running xmms from commandline (thus binding these commands to
> keys). It allows control volume, skipping in current track (fast
> forward), do some playlist actions and lot more.

This helps:

[EMAIL PROTECTED] ~$ audacious --help
Usage: audacious [options] [files] ...

Options:
--------

-h, --help             Display this text and exit
-n, --session          Select Audacious/BMP/XMMS session (Default: 0)
-r, --rew              Skip backwards in playlist
-p, --play             Start playing current playlist
-u, --pause            Pause current song
-s, --stop             Stop current song
-t, --play-pause       Pause if playing, play otherwise
-f, --fwd              Skip forward in playlist
-e, --enqueue          Don't clear the playlist
-m, --show-main-window Show the main window
-a, --activate         Activate Audacious
-i, --sm-client-id     Previous session ID
-H, --headless         Headless operation [experimental]
-N, --no-log           Disable error/warning interception (logging)
-v, --version          Print version number and exit

-- 
Krzysiek Pawlik   <nelchael at gentoo.org>   key id: 0xBC555551
desktop-misc, desktop-dock, desktop-wm, x86, java, apache...

Attachment: signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature

Reply via email to