SUMMARY="Find your mouse pointer with animated concentric circles" DESCRIPTION="'Where Is My Mouse' is a little application that draws \ concentric circles around the mouse pointer. This can help finding it \ on the screen, especially when doing a presentations with a projector or \ on a laptop. Use Haiku's Shortcuts preferences to set a key combination for the tool. Just run it to see the effect. To change settings like number of circles, their width and the speed of the \ animation, run it from the Terminal with the "-s" parameter: WhereIsMyMouse -s This will open a settings panel to adjust those visuals. You can change the \ color of the circles by drag'n'dropping a color from an app like Colors!, \ Icon-O-Matic or WonderBrush onto the animation preview. Settings are saved in ~/config/settings/WhereIsMyMouse_settings." HOMEPAGE="https://github.com/HaikuArchives/WheresMyMouse" COPYRIGHT="2002 Marcin 'Shard' Konicki" LICENSE="MIT" REVISION="2" srcGitRev="b2a90328bb80ac564a83f23bc53871e4d1c0da3d" SOURCE_URI="https://github.com/HaikuArchives/WheresMyMouse/archive/$srcGitRev.tar.gz" CHECKSUM_SHA256="8b6a98f3a6e31d7ec948d18463fd0a62736b2d18b5928ecf22e3d3b7c8bf0696" SOURCE_DIR="WheresMyMouse-$srcGitRev" ARCHITECTURES="all" PROVIDES=" whereismymouse = $portVersion cmd:WhereIsMyMouse = $portVersion " REQUIRES=" haiku " BUILD_REQUIRES=" haiku_devel " BUILD_PREREQUIRES=" makefile_engine cmd:gcc cmd:make " BUILD() { cd source make $jobArgs OBJ_DIR=objects } INSTALL() { mkdir -p $binDir cd source/objects cp -a WhereIsMyMouse $binDir }