Is it possible to permanently show notifications on my screen?












3















With the command notify-send, it's possible to show a notification on screen for a small amount of time. But I'd like to have a specific notification on my screen for an undetermined amount of time. I'm creating a script that is initiated and terminated by the user, for me it'd be useful to have a command that activates the notification and then deactivates it after my script is finished. The pseudocode would be something like this:



#!/bin/bash

activatenotification "my text"

# my script commands

deactivatenotification


Is it possible to do? Is there such a command line tool or can I do something like that using notify-send?










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    notify-send is built in such way that the notifications do have to exit. What you can use is zenity to show popups. These can stay on screen indefinitely. They're small GUI windows. So you can either close or kill them. Does that sound like something that you're looking for ?

    – Sergiy Kolodyazhnyy
    Jan 5 at 1:30











  • @SergiyKolodyazhnyy I'd like to keep using the computer while I see the notification on my screen. I think that zenity doesn't allow me to navigate through other windows while it's open, does it?

    – Rafael Muynarsk
    Jan 5 at 1:34













  • Zenity dialog windows are just like any other application windows. You can still put them in the background or minimize them and keep doing other things.

    – Byte Commander
    Jan 5 at 1:43
















3















With the command notify-send, it's possible to show a notification on screen for a small amount of time. But I'd like to have a specific notification on my screen for an undetermined amount of time. I'm creating a script that is initiated and terminated by the user, for me it'd be useful to have a command that activates the notification and then deactivates it after my script is finished. The pseudocode would be something like this:



#!/bin/bash

activatenotification "my text"

# my script commands

deactivatenotification


Is it possible to do? Is there such a command line tool or can I do something like that using notify-send?










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    notify-send is built in such way that the notifications do have to exit. What you can use is zenity to show popups. These can stay on screen indefinitely. They're small GUI windows. So you can either close or kill them. Does that sound like something that you're looking for ?

    – Sergiy Kolodyazhnyy
    Jan 5 at 1:30











  • @SergiyKolodyazhnyy I'd like to keep using the computer while I see the notification on my screen. I think that zenity doesn't allow me to navigate through other windows while it's open, does it?

    – Rafael Muynarsk
    Jan 5 at 1:34













  • Zenity dialog windows are just like any other application windows. You can still put them in the background or minimize them and keep doing other things.

    – Byte Commander
    Jan 5 at 1:43














3












3








3








With the command notify-send, it's possible to show a notification on screen for a small amount of time. But I'd like to have a specific notification on my screen for an undetermined amount of time. I'm creating a script that is initiated and terminated by the user, for me it'd be useful to have a command that activates the notification and then deactivates it after my script is finished. The pseudocode would be something like this:



#!/bin/bash

activatenotification "my text"

# my script commands

deactivatenotification


Is it possible to do? Is there such a command line tool or can I do something like that using notify-send?










share|improve this question
















With the command notify-send, it's possible to show a notification on screen for a small amount of time. But I'd like to have a specific notification on my screen for an undetermined amount of time. I'm creating a script that is initiated and terminated by the user, for me it'd be useful to have a command that activates the notification and then deactivates it after my script is finished. The pseudocode would be something like this:



#!/bin/bash

activatenotification "my text"

# my script commands

deactivatenotification


Is it possible to do? Is there such a command line tool or can I do something like that using notify-send?







scripts notification notify-send






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jan 5 at 11:47







Rafael Muynarsk

















asked Jan 5 at 1:20









Rafael MuynarskRafael Muynarsk

547520




547520








  • 1





    notify-send is built in such way that the notifications do have to exit. What you can use is zenity to show popups. These can stay on screen indefinitely. They're small GUI windows. So you can either close or kill them. Does that sound like something that you're looking for ?

    – Sergiy Kolodyazhnyy
    Jan 5 at 1:30











  • @SergiyKolodyazhnyy I'd like to keep using the computer while I see the notification on my screen. I think that zenity doesn't allow me to navigate through other windows while it's open, does it?

    – Rafael Muynarsk
    Jan 5 at 1:34













  • Zenity dialog windows are just like any other application windows. You can still put them in the background or minimize them and keep doing other things.

    – Byte Commander
    Jan 5 at 1:43














  • 1





    notify-send is built in such way that the notifications do have to exit. What you can use is zenity to show popups. These can stay on screen indefinitely. They're small GUI windows. So you can either close or kill them. Does that sound like something that you're looking for ?

    – Sergiy Kolodyazhnyy
    Jan 5 at 1:30











  • @SergiyKolodyazhnyy I'd like to keep using the computer while I see the notification on my screen. I think that zenity doesn't allow me to navigate through other windows while it's open, does it?

    – Rafael Muynarsk
    Jan 5 at 1:34













  • Zenity dialog windows are just like any other application windows. You can still put them in the background or minimize them and keep doing other things.

    – Byte Commander
    Jan 5 at 1:43








1




1





notify-send is built in such way that the notifications do have to exit. What you can use is zenity to show popups. These can stay on screen indefinitely. They're small GUI windows. So you can either close or kill them. Does that sound like something that you're looking for ?

– Sergiy Kolodyazhnyy
Jan 5 at 1:30





notify-send is built in such way that the notifications do have to exit. What you can use is zenity to show popups. These can stay on screen indefinitely. They're small GUI windows. So you can either close or kill them. Does that sound like something that you're looking for ?

– Sergiy Kolodyazhnyy
Jan 5 at 1:30













@SergiyKolodyazhnyy I'd like to keep using the computer while I see the notification on my screen. I think that zenity doesn't allow me to navigate through other windows while it's open, does it?

– Rafael Muynarsk
Jan 5 at 1:34







@SergiyKolodyazhnyy I'd like to keep using the computer while I see the notification on my screen. I think that zenity doesn't allow me to navigate through other windows while it's open, does it?

– Rafael Muynarsk
Jan 5 at 1:34















Zenity dialog windows are just like any other application windows. You can still put them in the background or minimize them and keep doing other things.

– Byte Commander
Jan 5 at 1:43





Zenity dialog windows are just like any other application windows. You can still put them in the background or minimize them and keep doing other things.

– Byte Commander
Jan 5 at 1:43










1 Answer
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If your issue is with the short duration of the notify-send alert, then you can set the urgency level of an alert to 'critical'. This would produce a persistent notification which you'll have to dismiss manually.



Use the following format



notify-send -u critical "Header" "Body text"





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    6














    If your issue is with the short duration of the notify-send alert, then you can set the urgency level of an alert to 'critical'. This would produce a persistent notification which you'll have to dismiss manually.



    Use the following format



    notify-send -u critical "Header" "Body text"





    share|improve this answer






























      6














      If your issue is with the short duration of the notify-send alert, then you can set the urgency level of an alert to 'critical'. This would produce a persistent notification which you'll have to dismiss manually.



      Use the following format



      notify-send -u critical "Header" "Body text"





      share|improve this answer




























        6












        6








        6







        If your issue is with the short duration of the notify-send alert, then you can set the urgency level of an alert to 'critical'. This would produce a persistent notification which you'll have to dismiss manually.



        Use the following format



        notify-send -u critical "Header" "Body text"





        share|improve this answer















        If your issue is with the short duration of the notify-send alert, then you can set the urgency level of an alert to 'critical'. This would produce a persistent notification which you'll have to dismiss manually.



        Use the following format



        notify-send -u critical "Header" "Body text"






        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited Jan 5 at 2:06

























        answered Jan 5 at 1:47









        pomskypomsky

        32.2k11100131




        32.2k11100131






























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