gnome-shell-extension-ddterm
gnome-clipboard-history
gnome-shell-extension-ddterm | gnome-clipboard-history | |
---|---|---|
9 | 25 | |
276 | 385 | |
4.0% | - | |
9.9 | 7.4 | |
1 day ago | 29 days ago | |
JavaScript | JavaScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | MIT License |
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.
gnome-shell-extension-ddterm
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Down the Rabbit Hole of Linux Terminal Emulators
DDTerm is "Another Drop Down Terminal Extension for GNOME Shell" and has managed to be a perfect drop-in replacement for Guake for me. It supports, among other things:
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Silverblue 38 with Gnome 44 on ddterm?
From the looks of this issue it seems it'll be sorted out pretty soon, or do you really need it that badly?
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What are your must-have extensions?
ddterm
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Using Gnome shell extension for Gnome-Terminal
I found this: ddterm/gnome-shell-extension-ddterm Which looks like a good alternative to Guake terminal, but I realized during the install process is that it's for Gnome Shell, not Gnome-terminal, so the command gnome-extensions install is not available unless I install gnome shell.
- ddterm alternative with split view?
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Extensions you can't live without?
AppIndicator and KStatusNotifierItem Support Because it's needed, and GS doesn't provide for it. Bluetooth Quick Connect Until GS supports this by default. [Caffeine] Because that's how it should be by default. Clipboard History Because I frequently need several bits of text to paste at different times, and my workflow is often non-linear. ddterm Because I frequently use the terminal for small one-off operations and I prefer to summon and dismiss the terminal with one keystroke whenever needed. Besides, it's one of the best terminal emulators for GS. Dim On Battery Power Because GS doesn't do that, and it should. GSConnect Obviously. Hot Edge Because it greatly simplifies workflow and eliminates the need for a dock extension. Primary Input on LockScreen Because Gnome devs haven't fixed this bug for ages, and it's frustrating to have non-latin layouts even available for the system password input. Unite Because it takes care of focusing windows that demand attention and removing titlebars on maximized windows (precious vertical real estate). I also use it for aesthetic purposes: to remove the Activities button, to display the current window title instead of it (very handy with maximized browser - shows the page title using almost all the space left of the clock), and also to shrink the distance between panel items (Unite does it better than Just Perfection).
- DDTerm and Forge extensions for gnome.
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What terminal emulator are you using?
I use DDTERM (aka dropdown terminal). I bound it to F1, it isn't used for anything.
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Gnome 43.1 best extensions?
Thank you for mentioning ddterm! I've been using it all week and it's great.
gnome-clipboard-history
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Does Ubuntu have Clipboard History or something similar like Windows 10?
Ubuntu uses GNOME. I use a GNOME extension, Clipboard History. It works well.
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Ask HN: What GNOME Shell extensions do you use?
I'm currently using 4 extensions.
system-monitor (https://extensions.gnome.org/extension/120/system-monitor/). It is nice to see my CPU and memory usage at a glance with some history. I don't look too often but it can be good for understanding how builds are progressing, check that my software is utilizing parallelism well and see when things are in an infinite loop gobbling RAM.
Clipboard History (https://extensions.gnome.org/extension/4839/clipboard-histor...)
I can't live without a clipboard manager, this seems to do a decent job.
Bing Wallpaper (https://extensions.gnome.org/extension/1262/bing-wallpaper-c...)
I don't see my wallpaper often but when I open the menu or log in it is nice to have a new beautiful picture.
AppIndicator and KStatusNotifierItem Support (https://extensions.gnome.org/extension/615/appindicator-supp...)
I like icons in my toolbar.
- How come there is no proper clipboard manager in Ubuntu?
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What is the best GUI based clipboard?
Clipboard History
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What are your must-have extensions?
https://extensions.gnome.org/extension/4839/clipboard-history/ – it's a 10x boost to my productivity since my daily job is copying snippets of code from StackOverflow /s
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Extensions you can't live without?
AppIndicator and KStatusNotifierItem Support Because it's needed, and GS doesn't provide for it. Bluetooth Quick Connect Until GS supports this by default. [Caffeine] Because that's how it should be by default. Clipboard History Because I frequently need several bits of text to paste at different times, and my workflow is often non-linear. ddterm Because I frequently use the terminal for small one-off operations and I prefer to summon and dismiss the terminal with one keystroke whenever needed. Besides, it's one of the best terminal emulators for GS. Dim On Battery Power Because GS doesn't do that, and it should. GSConnect Obviously. Hot Edge Because it greatly simplifies workflow and eliminates the need for a dock extension. Primary Input on LockScreen Because Gnome devs haven't fixed this bug for ages, and it's frustrating to have non-latin layouts even available for the system password input. Unite Because it takes care of focusing windows that demand attention and removing titlebars on maximized windows (precious vertical real estate). I also use it for aesthetic purposes: to remove the Activities button, to display the current window title instead of it (very handy with maximized browser - shows the page title using almost all the space left of the clock), and also to shrink the distance between panel items (Unite does it better than Just Perfection).
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How active are the extensions dev's?
-For the Clipboard Manager, I couldn't find the one you mean, but I had good experiences with Clipboard History by SUPERCILEX (I'm using it right now to copy the links). Clipman by popov895 seem pretty similair but I haven't tested it. Pano - Clipboard Manager by alperenelhan is a fairly new one that looks awesome, but is still missing some features I need.
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Problem with Nobara Official ISO 2022-08-23 (Gnome with KDE-like Layout)
ArcMenu, Blur my Shell, Clipboard History, Dash to Panel, Desktop Icons, Pop Shell and Sound Input and Output Device Chooser are the ones used while also switching "AppIndicator and KStatusNotifierItem Support" on.
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left windows 11 for fedora and currently loving gnome rn what should i do?
A more performant and newer alternative to clipboard indicator is clipboard history
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Webdev LPT: Use Windows+V on your keyboard to enable multiple copy-paste items
On Ubuntu, Fedora, and similar, this is probably the best-integrated one: https://extensions.gnome.org/extension/4839/clipboard-history/
What are some alternatives?
guake - Drop-down terminal for GNOME
gnome-shell-extension-gsconnect - KDE Connect implementation for GNOME
greenclip - Simple clipboard manager to be integrated with rofi - Static binary available
Vitals - A glimpse into your computer's temperature, voltage, fan speed, memory usage and CPU load.
clients - Bitwarden client applications (web, browser extension, desktop, and cli)
gnome-shell-pano - Next-gen Clipboard Manager for Gnome Shell
gnome-shell-extension-clipboard-indicator - The most popular clipboard manager for GNOME, with over 1M downloads
vertical-overview - Gnome has had vertically stacked workspaces for a long time. The Gnome 40 update unfortunately made the switch to a horizontal layout. A choice that many Gnome users disagree with. This extension completely replaces the new Gnome overview with something that resembles the old style.
Ditto - Ditto is an extension to the Windows Clipboard. You copy something to the Clipboard and Ditto takes what you copied and stores it in a database to retrieve at a later time.
panel-corners - A gnome-shell extension to keep the old topbar corners, which were removed for GNOME 42.
gnome-shell-scroll-workspaces - Switch workspaces by scrolling in the top panel