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NAME

       kmdr-plugins  - plugin manager for the Kommander visual dialog building
       tool

SYNOPSIS

       kmdr-plugins [ generic-options ]

DESCRIPTION

       Kommander is a visual dialog building tool whose primary  objective  is
       to create as much functionality as possible without using any scripting
       language.

       It is possible to extend Kommander by writing your  own  plugins.   The
       plugin  manager  kmdr-plugins is a simple user interface to Kommander’s
       configuration file, and can be used to select  which  external  plugins
       Kommander  should  load.  Closing the plugin manager will automatically
       save any changes.

       By loading a plugin, the custom widgets that  it  defines  will  become
       available  in  Kommander’s menus and toolbars, and these custom widgets
       can be used in Kommander dialogs.

       See kmdr-editor(1) and kmdr-executor(1) for a more detailed description
       of Kommander.

       This application is part of the official KDE web development module.

OPTIONS

       For a full summary of options, run kmdr-plugins --help.

SEE ALSO

       extractkmdr(1),     kmdr-editor(1),    kmdr-executor(1),    kmdr2po(1),
       quanta(1).

       Full user documentation is available through the KDE Help Centre.   You
       can  also enter the URL help:/kommander/ directly into konqueror or you
       can run ‘khelpcenter help:/kommander/’ from the command-line.

       If the KDE Help Centre is  not  installed  then  you  can  install  the
       package  kdewebdev-doc-html  and read this documentation in HTML format
       from /usr/share/doc/kde/HTML/en/kommander/.

AUTHOR

       Kommander was written by Marc Britton  <consume@optusnet.com.au>,  Eric
       Laffoon   <sequitur@kde.org>,  Michal  Rudolf  <mrudolf@kdewebdev.org>,
       Andras Mantia <amantia@kde.org> and Trolltech.
       This manual page was prepared by Ben Burton  <bab@debian.org>  for  the
       Debian GNU/Linux system (but may be used by others).

                                March 25, 2005