With Onion os and the MM+ I have seen some complaints about the wifi symbol overlapping the battery% and I ran into the same issue myself. I wanted to share a workaround I have been using. Someone else may have already shared this however I could not find it while searching for a workaround.

I get why the fingerprint icon can't move as the sensor is in a fixed position, but why doesn't the battery remaining move around the screen like the clock? On the s8 the % was directly underneath the clock and moved with it.


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There is an option in Lock Star to remove the battery icon and the percentage from AOD. (In Lock Star :tap on AOD preview screen, tap on battery icon area, then on the settings icon bottom left, then choose the second option. )

EDIT:

after posting I checked to see what version of Papirus-Dark I had installed and saw I had papirus-icon-theme-git from AUR that was last updated in 2017, changed over to the papirus-icon-theme 20180401-1 from the community Repo, discharging the laptop now to see if that fixes it.

I haven't tried your script just yet, mostly because I feel the base system should work with a proper icon pack. however after swapping the icon pack version, upower seems to be stuck as saying it wants battery-full-symbolic when the battery is at 60%

Are laptop batteries truly linear? If not, an actual percentage would probably be much more useful. But IDK. My (laptop's) battery has been non-functional for at least a year; the power/charging light just s-l-o-w-l-y blinks on and off, orange. I have been afraid to attempt to crack it open to try a repair with some kind of little batteries. Plus, there are more than two connection points - which tells me there's more than a simple two-way voltage path. I am thinking about the Epson(?) printer ink cartridges that had a little chip inside, that told the printer when the cartridge was "no good." Things are really tight right now and I would hate to save up to get replacement battery parts only to learn that these things keep track of the number of charge cycles and, for whatever reason (greed, possibly?), stop allowing a charge cycle to take place after an arbitrary number of them has occurred. Plus, I have no way of knowing whether it is the battery that is at fault or something in the laptop itself. But I DO know that a functional battery would be a wonderful thing. I'm well beyond being tired of even the shortest power "blink" immediately - and harshly(!) - shutting off my laptop.

I realize it is confusing the way they have decided to label the icon preview in Power Management Settings, but the theme isn't actually related to those preview images in any way. No matter what theme you have selected, the thumbnails next to "from theme", "circle/circle with percentage", "battery with percentage/battery with percentage opaque" are the same.

If you want to change that icon without disrupting the rest of the theme, you would need to find a new icon that you like and replace the BeautyLine battery icon. Don't forget to back up the original, in case you want to change it back some day.

You can help lower your device's carbon footprint while helping your battery last longer. The Energy recommendations section is a quick place to go when you're looking for a collection of settings that affect your power usage.

Select Start  > Settings  > System  > Power & battery . If you want battery saver to turn on whenever the battery falls below a certain level, select Battery saver, then choose the battery level you'd like. To turn on battery saver now and leave it on until the next time you plug in your PC, select Turn on now next to Battery saver , or select the Battery icon in the notification area, then select the Battery saver quick setting.

Turn on battery saver in Settings

Select Start  > Settings  > System  > Power & battery  > Screen and sleep. For On battery power, turn off my screen after, pick a shorter duration. 

Open Power & sleep settings

Select Start  > Settings  > System  > Display  > Brightness . Clear the Change brightness automatically when lighting changes or the Help improve battery by optimizing the content shown and brightness check box (if either appears), and then use the slider to set the brightness level you want.

Open Display settings

Select Start  > Settings  > System  > Power & battery  > Screen and sleep. For On battery power, put my device to sleep after, choose a shorter duration.

Open Power & sleep settings

Some apps let you manage background activity. If you find that an app is using a lot of battery when running in the background, you can change the setting for apps that allow it. Select Start  > Settings  > System  > Power & battery  > Battery usage. Under Battery usage per app, see which apps might be using more battery in the background. For an app that let you manage the background activity, select More options  > Manage background activity. On the settings page for that app, change the setting for Let this app run in the background.

Select Start  > Settings  > Apps  > Video playback . For Battery options, select Optimize for battery life. To help save more battery, select the Play video at a lower resolution when on battery check box.

Select the Start  button, and then select Settings  > System  > Power & sleep . Under On battery power, PC goes to sleep after, choose a shorter duration.

Open Power & sleep settings

Select the Start  button, and then select Settings  > System  > Power & sleep  > When my PC is asleep and on battery power, disconnect from the network. Change the setting to Always or Managed by Windows instead of Never.

I am excited to use this script. I have built it from AUR, it starts and reports battery information properly, however, I do not have a proper icon (there is a red 'x' with some themes, other themes are just blank). I've installed quite a few icon themes (and switched to them using 'lxappearance'), but I am obviously missing a vital piece. I do not have lxde installed, just fluxbox and X.

I am excited to use this script. I have built it from AUR, it starts and reports battery information properly, however, I do not have a proper icon (there is a red 'x' with some themes, other themes are just blank).

One solution is to copy all status icons from Faenza Dark to your icon theme of choice. Of course, that will destroy all nice status icons in that icon theme. In Faenza Dark the png's are called 'gpm-battery-xxx-xxx.png' and 'gpm-primary-xxx-xxx.png', or the like. You could also copy each and every one of them manually for all sizes and scalable too. That would preserve your present status icons and just add the necessary ones.

I've been mad at xfce4-power-manager for a while now because while its interface is pretty much the same as this (which is what I want), it likes to not realize that i've removed the power adaptor, or plugged it back in, and so on. So I sat there wondering why there didn't seem to be a battery monitor that just polled acpi periodically, and ended up just writing a shell script that just outputs the %

Trying this solution, but it's not yet working for me. I have openbox and Clearlooks is my default theme. After I copied all Faenza-Dark png's from status/16 to /usr/share/themes/Clearlooks same red cross persists. Thanks for any tips!

I had a problem where this script would crash after suspending my laptop due to the output of acpi not matching the desired result, i've modified the script to check to make sure the output matches using a regular expression and i also modified the icons to use the xfce4-battery-* icons. Here is my modified version of the script:

Hey there,

I forked the github repo and created a modified version of the application.

The application that I created is for systems with dual battery setups (like the Thinkpad X240).

you can find the modified version here

I would just like to clarify another thing. Do i use rotation properties if instead of batter percentage its secs, mins, or hours representation in such chronograph. First i thought this has something to do with rotation values

Hello,

The documentation for using WFS is diplomatically said limited and some techniques discussed here for GWD, can be applied for WFS in similar way.

But for your first post about the battery indicator check this thread:

Is it possible to color button card based on applied aystem theme? I have my buttons colored black with white font, but on phone where I use light theme, I would like to switch that.

So for instance if I have light theme, display it white/black font for me, however at the same time, if my wife is using black theme, color them black.

A different way to go that I find useful for myself is the battery state card. I have mine set up to be hidden unless batteries are below a specified minimum, and only those low batteries are shown. It also handles color gradients based on percentage of remaining battery.

I have also experimented with conditionally showing a small battery icon overlay on the same button card that I use to show/control the battery operated device. I use the custom_fields feature of the button card for the overlay. The nice thing about overlays is they can be clicked separately from the rest of the button to see the details of the battery.

On Windows 11, running low on battery when you are actively using the device can be a frustrating situation, even more, if there's not a power outlet nearby, but there are many ways to make the most of a single charge, and in this guide, we'll show you how. ff782bc1db

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