Snarl is a notification system for Microsoft Windows inspired by Growl that allows applications to display alpha-blended messages on the screen.

Developer(s)Snarl Team
Initial release2007; 17 years ago (2007)
Stable release
3.1 / 14 March 2014; 10 years ago (2014-03-14)
Operating systemWindows 2000, Windows XP, Windows Vista, Windows 7
Typeglobal notification system
License2-clause BSD
Websitesnarl.fullphat.net

Unlike other forms of notification, Snarl does not hijack the current focused window, nor does it force the taskbar to be visible. Notifications can either be canceled by clicking on them, or left to disappear automatically if ignored for a period of time.

Snarl can display several messages at any one time; new messages are simply displayed beneath (or above) existing ones. An application can display any number of messages, and can update the content, icon, and time the message appears for any particular message at any time and explicitly remove the message if required. Applications can also request to be notified if a user clicks on a particular message.

Developers of other applications can include Snarl support in their applications with almost no effort at all - Snarl uses Windows window messaging functionality to show and hide notifications, making it accessible to any programming language from low-level pure C to high-level Visual Basic 6 or .NET-based environments.

Features

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Applications supported by Snarl

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Snarl-Specific applications

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  • SnarlClock (included with Snarl)
  • SnarlTray (included with Snarl)
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