+chorizo
+======
- ==========
- lariza
- ==========
+http://armaanb.net/chorizo.html
+A simple web browser using GTK+ 3, GLib and WebKit2GTK+.
-A simple web browser using GTK+ 2, GLib and WebKitGTK+.
+Refer to the manpages chorizo(1), and chorizo-usage(1) for more information.
-Features:
+Installation
+------------
- - A WebKit viewport
- - An input box to change the current URL
- - Global content zoom
- - Pluggability into suckless' tabbed
- - Downloading files using wget
- - vi-like scrolling (modified by CTRL)
- - Searching the current page for a word
- - Adblock
- - Support for Flash and Java
- - Cooperative instances using FIFOs (can be turned off)
+The following C libraries are required:
-Planned features:
+ - GTK+ 3
+ - WebKit2 API for GTK+ 3
+ - gst-libav, gst-plugins-good (for media playback)
- - Keyword based searching (opening "wi foo" will search wikipedia)
+The following programs are required:
+ - A C compiler supporting C11
+ - make
+ - pkg-config
+chorizo expects to be run on a POSIX-ish operating system.
-About the name
-==============
+To build and install the program:
-"lariza" stems from a german sentence:
+ $ make
+ # make install
- Alle anderen waren mir zu anstrengend.
- l a r i z a
-That phrase basically means: "It was too tiresome to deal with any other
-browser." I couldn't find a simple browser that does just what I need.
-Most of them are utterly bloated, others lack essential functions. Thus,
-I was forced to write scripts and tools and stuff to deal with these
-issues. That is what was tiresome. I don't want to work around bugs or
-nonsensical behavior anymore.
+How is chorizo related to lariza?
+---------------------------------
-So, I wrote my own browser^W WebKit GUI. WebKit does all the dirty work.
+ chorizo is a fork of the lariza browser by Peter Hofmann. I wanted
+ to take it in a slightly different direction (mostly just adding
+ features not considered to be in the spirit of lariza), so I forked
+ it. The name was changed in order to reduce confusion between the
+ two browsers as they grew apart.
-
-What lariza is and what it's not
-================================
-
-lariza does what I need. It won't do other things. I'm open for pull
-requests but please don't be upset if I turn them down -- which might
-happen if it's a feature that I simply don't need.
-
-Especially, it's very likely that lariza will never have a "follow
-mode" like dwb, luakit or others have. I've used these browsers for
-quite some time and I also used Firefox extensions that add a "follow
-mode". The point is, "follow mode" doesn't work anymore. This was a good
-thing ten years ago. Today, a lot of websites make heavy use of
-JavaScript or hovering. You NEED some kind of pointing device. I found
-using "follow mode" to be very frustrating today, because you still have
-to reach for the mouse all the time. So, you might as well just optimize
-your mousing workflow.
-
-lariza does not compete with powerful browsers like dwb or luakit, nor
-with monstrous applications like Firefox or Chromium. lariza won't have
-persistent storage, nor a plugin system, nor cloud sync, nor bookmarks.
-
-lariza tries not to exceed 1000 lines of code.
-
-
-Using lariza with tabbed
-========================
-
-The order of arguments for lariza doesn't matter. This means you can run
-it like this:
-
- $ tabbed -c lariza file:///home/hans/bookmarks.html -z 0.8 -e
-
-Each new tab will then show your bookmarks and is scaled by a factor of
-0.8.
-
-If "-e" is not specified, lariza will launch tabbed automatically. Note
-that you can't use tabbed's "Ctrl+Shift+Enter" hotkey to open a new tab
-this way (lariza will simply call "tabbed -c -d", so tabbed will know
-nothing about lariza). However, due to lariza's cooperative instances,
-you can simply start lariza a second time and it will create a new tab.
-
-
-Adblock
-=======
-
-lariza has built-in adblock functionality. In each line of
-
- ~/.config/lariza/adblock.black
-
-you can store a regular expression. These expressions match
-case-insensitive and partially, i.e. ".*foo.*" is the same as ".*FOO.*"
-and you can use anchors like "^https?://...".
-
-
-WebKit local storage
-====================
-
-WebKit does create files in your $XDG_* directories, i.e. ~/.local/share
-or ~/.cache. It's up to you what you want to do with this junk. I remove
-it regularly if no WebKit browser is running. Another option would be to
-change the $XDG_* variables.
-
-I have explicitly not turned off the local storage feature in WebKit
-because I don't know if this breaks web applications.
-
-
-Literature
-==========
-
-API references:
-
- - http://webkitgtk.org/reference/webkitgtk/stable/index.html
- - https://developer.gnome.org/gtk2/stable/index.html
- - https://developer.gnome.org/glib/stable/index.html
-
-Regular expressions supported by GRegex, you can use these in your
-adblock patterns:
-
- - https://developer.gnome.org/glib/stable/glib-regex-syntax.html
+ Differences:
+ - New versioning scheme
+ - Revamped download manager
+ - New keybindings
+ - Better default directories
+ - Easily togglable JavaScript
+ - Cleaned up source code
+ - Easy web searching
+ - User stylesheet support
+ - A variety of tweaks and adjustments that make the experience nicer