Tiling-Assistant
gnome-shell-extended-gestures
Tiling-Assistant | gnome-shell-extended-gestures | |
---|---|---|
23 | 9 | |
1,058 | 300 | |
- | - | |
7.8 | 0.0 | |
4 days ago | about 3 years ago | |
JavaScript | JavaScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
Tiling-Assistant
- Help. I’m using the PopOS tile windows extension(not on popOS) and most apps when opens after boot opens in a weird zoomed way as shown.
- do any tiling extensions work on Gnome 44?
-
Anything like Magnet (macOS)?
Maybe tiling-assistant
- 2022 was the year of Linux on the Desktop
- This time, I'm here to stay
-
Resizing two tiled windows leaks memory and is laggy.
Disable GNOME's tiling code, by installing https://github.com/Leleat/Tiling-Assistant instead.
-
Gnome has no thumbnails in the file picker (and my toilets are blocked)
This comment might come off a little off-topic but I think it's pretty related.
The Gnome Project has always struck me of having this Apple-Like attitude of "We know Best", and subsequently ignoring/shrugging off user concerns/issues/etc.
It's pretty obvious that Gnome is at the very least "inspired" by macOS. Heck Apple started version bumping by whole numbers at right about the same time Gnome switched from 3.x to 4x.
I use it on my Touchscreen Convertible Laptop, since it supports multi-touch gestures (on the touchpad too), and as long as I install extensions to bend Gnome to my will, it seems to work pretty darn well for me. (For example, adding window tiling with the https://github.com/Leleat/Tiling-Assistant extension).
Perhaps there is a better way that I should switch too, but currently I remain ignorant.
-
Window tiling to quads?
Ahh. Okay you need to install it from GitHub instead of the GNOME website then. The author fixed the multi-monitor tiling bug (discussion) but it's only available via GitHub at the moment:
-
Tiling Assistant is now supported in Gnome 42 <3
Github repo: here
-
best tiling extension now?
Tiling-Assistant the hidden Layouts settings has the option to also launch the defined apps for each tile u set ;>
gnome-shell-extended-gestures
-
Which touchpad gestures package to install?
gnome-shell-extended-gestures: this one requires Wayland, not sure if this is okay or not
-
Touchpad swipes to control to go back one page in your browser in GNOME 40
I don't know where you can exactly read up on that. I guess go to the extension's github page and ask there. Here how it looks in the extension's settings.
-
trackpad gesture to "go back" in web browsers
There are some Github projects that provide both utilities in one (Ex. fusuma and fusuma-plugin-sendkey) and even some projects that already have the browser back/forward integrated in Wayland (Ex. gnome-shell-extended-gestures).
-
System76 Developing “Cosmic” Desktop Environment
Gnome 3 has gesture support. I don't think many are built in, certainly not as many as mac OS gives you out of the box. But you can go wild: https://github.com/mpiannucci/gnome-shell-extended-gestures
-
Two fingers horizontal swipe for ALT-TAB
Hi, before G40 I use this extension to manage swipe gestures, now with native gnome gestures I have some problem to switch from application to another application in the same workspace; is there a way to use two fingers horizontal swipe for emulate the ALT-TAB function? Thx
-
Is there is a way to change workspaces using the trackpad like the way Mac does?
I was thinking of this one: https://github.com/mpiannucci/gnome-shell-extended-gestures. The other person’s link appears to be a better fit though.
-
Questions before I install Linux
This is really dependent on your desktop environment. For example, this is a GNOME extension that adds extra touchpad gestures.
-
gestures in gnome
Are you using X11 or Wayland? The README.md for that extension says that it only works on Wayland (just like Gnome's built-in support for touchpad gestures).
-
2 Finger History Navigation in Chrome/Chromium
Also looking for an answer to this. I've tried gnome-shell-extended-gestures and it lets me map a multitouch gesture to "back", but only 3 or 4 finger gestures. No luck there for the 2 finger horizontal history controls I'm used to with Windows and ChromeOS.
What are some alternatives?
shell - Pop!_OS Shell
touchegg - Linux multi-touch gesture recognizer
forge - Forge - Tiling and Window Manager for Gnome-Shell [Moved to: https://github.com/forge-ext/forge]
cosmic - Computer Operating System Main Interface Components
gnome-shell-extension-cast-to-tv - Cast files to Chromecast, web browser or media player app over local network.
Fusuma - Multitouch gestures with libinput driver on Linux
AltSnap - Maintained continuation of Stefan Sundin's AltDrag
ydotool - Generic command-line automation tool (no X!)
Tangram - Browser for your pinned tabs
forge - :electron: A complete tool for building and publishing Electron applications
comfortable-swipe - Comfortable 3-finger and 4-finger swipe gesture using Xdotool in native C++