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See below for the required data service work required to enable this on the backend. | See below for the required data service work required to enable this on the backend. | ||
Other ideas: | |||
* Allow the user to configure what Collections/Sources get displayed in each plasmoid instance, and to filter within those Collections e.g. have work and personal calendars on separate widgets, hide private events, disable events if calendar displayed on screen-saver, etc. | |||
* Use html table formatting in the pop-up text to allow proper layout | |||
and indenting? | |||
* I was suggesting we might move the code from the Calendar engine to the Akonadi data engine so the implementations and interfaces are consistent, but thinking about it again Akonadi is an implementation detail and a bad name for a high level api so perhaps separate data engines for Calendar, Mail, and Contacts are better even if they use the same underlying code and consistent api. | |||
== PIM Data Interface == | == PIM Data Interface == |
Revision as of 15:42, 28 May 2012
Plasma is all about Clocks. It's an old joke, but it contains a kernel of truth. The clock is the one element of the desktop most people depend on, and it can be a valuable conduit for information they need. This page will co-ordinate all the resources around the Plasma Clock and plans for it's future.
Resources
KDE Bugzilla all open Plasma Clock bugs
Current Implementation
The current implementation can be found in the following locations.
Time DataEngine - Provides current Time
Calendar DataEngine - Provides Events and Holidays
Akonadi DataEngine - Provides Akonadi email
Plasma Clock Library - Common base classes for all clock/calendar Applets.
The Binary Clock Applet (Addons)
The Fuzzy Clock Applet (Addons)
Future Plans
The main future plan is to support the adding of PIM data.
See below for the required data service work required to enable this on the backend.
Other ideas:
- Allow the user to configure what Collections/Sources get displayed in each plasmoid instance, and to filter within those Collections e.g. have work and personal calendars on separate widgets, hide private events, disable events if calendar displayed on screen-saver, etc.
- Use html table formatting in the pop-up text to allow proper layout
and indenting?
- I was suggesting we might move the code from the Calendar engine to the Akonadi data engine so the implementations and interfaces are consistent, but thinking about it again Akonadi is an implementation detail and a bad name for a high level api so perhaps separate data engines for Calendar, Mail, and Contacts are better even if they use the same underlying code and consistent api.
PIM Data Interface
Currently PIM data is read-only and is provided via the Calendar Plasma DataEngine. To make PIM data 2-way would require the creation of a Plasma Service. However, the Akonadi interface and the creation of PIM data in general is very complex and is not ideally suited to being mapped into a Data Engine or Service. The API would be very big and unwieldy and a maintenance nightmare, and the complex specialised gui widgets such as Recurrence Editor would have to be recreated. This is one occasion where Plasma elements requiring complex functionality will be better off directly using the Akonadi API and GUI elements. However this doesn't stop a simplified service being provided that would meet 80% of needs with the more complex requirements being left for the native apps to handle.
Plasma DataEngine
The Calendar DataEngine supports queries to Akonadi for Event, Todo, and Journal data, and to the KHolidays library for Holidays data.
The data structure is documented in the Calendar DataEngine API.
The following data fields are yet to be implemented:
- Attendees
- Attachments
- Relations
- Alarms
- Custom Properties
- Lat/Lon
- Collection/Source
Plasma Service Design
An initial minimal definition for the Plasma Service has been created. The actual implementation is still required.
Akonadi Calendar Model
Currently the Calendar DataEngine contains a direct copy of the required Akonadi Calendar Model as this code was not available in kdepimlibs at the time. See the README file for full details. When this API becomes available in KCalCore then the DataEngine must be ported to use it. Until then the code must be kept in sync withe the kdepim calendarsupport code for bug fixes every release.