X-Git-Url: http://git.tuebingen.mpg.de/?p=paraslash.git;a=blobdiff_plain;f=README.afs;h=ef51c2944259c010b5da74814ece1becef7f6cd9;hp=01d4b52e7bf6adacb45ba5a395cb5115f376b92c;hb=8b0ab0837ecdd5d28c7b6f31a605552f6942ca64;hpb=736760c45b10e9a593fcd81e1a230188386ca656;ds=sidebyside diff --git a/README.afs b/README.afs index 01d4b52e..ef51c294 100644 --- a/README.afs +++ b/README.afs @@ -78,10 +78,10 @@ A mood consists of a unique name and its *mood definition*, which is a set of *mood lines* containing expressions in terms of attributes and other data contained in the database. -A mood defines a subset of audio files called the *admissible audio -files* for that mood. At any time, at most one mood can be *active* -which means that para_server is going to select only files from that -subset of admissible files. +A mood defines a subset of audio files called the *admissible audio files* +for that mood. At any time, at most one mood can be *active* which +means that para_server is going to select only files from that subset +of admissible files. So in order to create a mood definition one has to write a set of mood lines. Mood lines come in three flavours: Accept lines, deny @@ -225,7 +225,7 @@ songs is Troubles? --------- -Use the debug loglevel (option -l 0 for most commands) to show +Use the debug loglevel (option -l debug for most commands) to show debugging info. Almost all paraslash executables have a brief online help which is displayed by using the -h switch. The --detailed-help option prints the full help text.