Finally, we’re going to save the file, and open it in Rainmeter by right clicking the raindrop icon in your taskbar (normally bottom-right) and selecting Configs>ez_calendar>ez_calendar.ini.Prints the four measures "Date Month, Year (Day of Week)" These next few inputs use the variables you declared earlier Use these next ones by typing %1, %2, %3 and %4, respectively. The second section prints it on your screen: The first section makes the config talk to computer to find the Year, Month, Date, and Day of the week (Go to the Rainmeter Manual and search for “Format Codes” to learn more about that). Finally, we’re going to code the actual config.Valid values are: NONE, SHADOW and BORDER. Valid values are: NORMAL, BOLD, ITALIC and BOLDITALIC. Test a few values to find one you like: FontHeight=64 Any value works, but the name has to match a font installed on your computer: FontName=Tahoma.They’re basically notes for future reference. These don’t show up after coding, but if you open the code up you can read them. You can see that the code is commented with semicolons.
![customizeorg rainmeter skin huge clock customizeorg rainmeter skin huge clock](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/5quwd1NGwkU/maxresdefault.jpg)
Especially useful for really complicated skins. These aren’t needed either, but will make it easier to edit later on, since you won’t have to swim in code.
![customizeorg rainmeter skin huge clock customizeorg rainmeter skin huge clock](https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-ErAgC4RcefA/XuuqAEwZQ3I/AAAAAAAA9kk/-uf5JDOSBQETSKRm1T1Nnlvinh44er-_wCK4BGAsYHg/s734/TUTORIAL.png)
Open it up! You can just open it in notepad, or use the geeky programmer’s notepad, N++.If you’ve got the proper file extension, the icon will change from a text file, to the one you see in the picture. Then, name it “ez_calendar.ini” and be sure the file extension is “.ini” and not “.ini.txt”. Once you’re in there, create a new config file by right-clicking anywhere in the folder and going to new>text document.Call it “ez_calendar” or whatever you want, really. Go to My DocumentsRainmeterSkins, and make your own folder. Fig1 - What your folder should look like once you've gotten through step 2