<command arg="-root"/>
- <string id="text" _label="Text for Flag" arg="-text %"/>
+ <string id="text" _label="Text for flag" arg="-text %"/>
- <file id="bitmap" _label="Bitmap for Flag" arg="-bitmap %"/>
-
- <number id="speed" type="slider" arg="-delay %"
- _label="Speed" _low-label="Slow" _high-label="Fast"
- low="0" high="60000" default="50000"
+ <number id="delay" type="slider" arg="-delay %"
+ _label="Frame rate" _low-label="Low" _high-label="High"
+ low="0" high="200000" default="50000"
convert="invert"/>
<number id="cycles" type="slider" arg="-cycles %"
low="0" high="800000" default="1000"/>
<number id="ncolors" type="slider" arg="-ncolors %"
- _label="Number of Colors" _low-label="Two" _high-label="Many"
+ _label="Number of colors" _low-label="Two" _high-label="Many"
low="1" high="255" default="200"/>
<!-- #### -size [-7] -->
+ <boolean id="showfps" _label="Show frame rate" arg-set="-fps"/>
+
<_description>
+This screen saver was removed from the XScreenSaver distribution as of
+version 5.08.
+
This draws a waving colored flag, that undulates its way around the
-screen. The trick is the flag can contain arbitrary text and images.
-By default, it displays either the current system name and OS
-type, or a picture of ``Bob,'' but you can replace the text or the
-image with a command-line option. Written by Charles Vidal and Jamie
-Zawinski.
+screen. The flag can contain arbitrary text and images. By default,
+it displays either the current system name and OS type, or a picture
+of "Bob".
+
+Written by Charles Vidal and Jamie Zawinski; 1997.
</_description>
</screensaver>