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feh | i3 | |
---|---|---|
21 | 200 | |
1,400 | 9,053 | |
- | 1.7% | |
6.4 | 7.6 | |
7 days ago | 5 days ago | |
C | C | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License |
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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.
feh
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Xee Viewer alternative for M2/Ventura
feh https://feh.finalrewind.org/ install with brew install feh
- The X11 Conservancy Project
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Is there a way to disable texture filtering on thumbnails in Nautilus? It would make it easier to see pixel art.
Try using feh, from terminal navigate to the directory where you store your pixel arts, then execute: feh -i --force-aliasing -b trans Option -i is for index mode, --force-aliasing disable the AA during zoom-in/out, -b trans uses checker box patterns for transparent, otherwise black BG by default. Also, use the up and down arrow keys for zoom.
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Plotting the memory of a PHP process with Gnuplot 📈
What would be handy would be a graph that refreshes over time. For that, you will need 2 tiny programs: watch and feh.
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What softwares do you recommend to a daily use BSD system?
Editors: * VS Code editors/vscode * Spacemacs editors/emacs * neovim editors/neovim Email: * Mozilla Thunderbird mail/thunderbird * neomutt mail/neomutt Browser: * Mozilla Firefox www/firefox (I use Tridactyl, uBlock Origin and uMatrix + a handfull more addons) * qutebrowser www/qutebrowser * w3m www/w3m PDF/Pictures: * feh graphics/feh * mupdf graphics/mupdf Audio/Video: * mpv multimedia/mpv (I rarely use a BSD machine for audio or video, but when I do, mpv has sufficed) X: * i3 x11wm/i3 * i3status x11/i3status * dmenu x11/dmenu Terminal utilities: * urxvt x11/rxvt-unicode * mosh net/mosh * fish shells/fish (for interactive use) * ksh shells/ksh93-devel (for scripts) * exa sysutils/exa replacement for ls written in Rust * fd sysutils/fd replacement for find written in Rust * htop sysutils/htop * ranger sysutils/py-ranger * tmux sysutils/tmux * bat textproc/bat ~replacement for~ complement to cat written in Rust * rg textproc/ripgrep fast grep like tool written in Rust
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{ Opening an image on terminal }
Here is link number 1 - Previous text "FEH"
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I've made a little Bash script that will download a random wallpaper from r/wallpapers and set it for you
If you want to make it more agnostic across operating systems, take a look at feh https://feh.finalrewind.org/
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How do you copy paste images in linux?
I think that's just something that feh doesn't support. See https://github.com/derf/feh/issues/527
- Why can't you have a single wallpaper stretch over multiple monitors in plasma
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Complaining since 2015.
an image viewer
i3
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Show HN: Chrome Reaper
While I believe Memory Saver was a great improvement, it only works if the tab is hidden or the window minimized. I recently learned the required state is not triggered if the tab is open but on another virtual desktop. At least this is the case with many of not all Linux window managers. Some of the many discussion threads on the topic:
https://github.com/i3/i3/issues/4353
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Firefox 121 defaults to Wayland on Linux
> This is very true, and unfortunately there are very few people working on linux accessibility (including not me! I am part of the problem!).
Accessibility work itself ironically suffers from an accessibility problem. I brought up i3wm above, the issue for that is pretty illuminating: https://github.com/i3/i3/issues/3393
It's not that the devs are saying "this doesn't matter", the devs behind one of the most popular tiling window managers in the X11 ecosystem are saying, "this does matter, but we don't know how to fix it. We don't know what changes we'd need to make to get Orca working."
It's a really fundamental breakdown that's kind of a tragedy because I honestly believe that if accessibility communities were more heavily baked into testing and development in Linux and if this wasn't treated like two separate worlds, it would be better for everyone -- fixing accessibility concerns very often improves interfaces across the board and makes them more powerful.
But... how do you bridge that gap? I don't really know, I tried looking into Orca to see what would need to happen here and bounced off of it pretty hard, it's not a very approachable tech stack and there aren't tutorials or getting started guides. And on the other side of the issue I can preach about needing accessibility input during interface design, but I'm not in a position to give specific advice because I don't use screenreaders or alternate control schemes and I don't know what the biggest problems are.
The people who need to be involved in that process can't get involved because there's a tech barrier in place even for technically inclined people, and because the underlying software locks them out from the start. i3wm isn't ever going to get someone who's intimately familiar with Orca to jump into the conversation because the people who need to use Orca can't use i3wm. So that leaves the people who can address that tech barrier, but they don't know what to do or how to approach the problem because of the lack of involvement and because the communities are isolated from each other. So it's a chicken-and-egg problem and I don't know how to solve it.
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"We understand" ;)
This is partially why i use tools like i3 (/ sway). i like the tool; it works extremely well for me; the design has stayed the same for 20 years; there's no profit motive to come along and fuck everything up. it just works. it is boring in the best way possible.
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what machines have you used for development, and what do you prefer?
I use MacBook Pro (Retina, 15-inch, Mid-2014) with Manjaro as OS using i3 as a window manager. It isn't perfect, but I'm thrilled with it. I have been a Mac OS user for the last 15 years and wouldn't change what I have now for a Mac OS because I don't need more than what I'm using for development.
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The future of /r/i3wm
Even though, we have moved the official i3 support channel to GitHub discussions, i3's biggest community is still on reddit and if things continue like that there is going to be a lot of helpful content on an increasingly closed platform.
- while in i3wm, krita dockers move downwards a bit each time they're spawned - how do I fix this?
- i3wm-like window switching for Windows
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egui_overlay - A transparent Overlay window where you can only click the "egui parts"
for example, take i3. https://github.com/i3/i3/issues/4478
- How to start on a Linux desktop environment?
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Machine for pentesting and general use?
For daily usage I really like kubuntu with i3wm, but it takes some configuration and getting used to the shortcuts, but it's well worth it
What are some alternatives?
sxiv - Simple X Image Viewer
sway - i3-compatible Wayland compositor
sxiv - Simple X Image Viewer
awesome - awesome window manager
nsxiv - Read-only mirror of Neo Simple X Image Viewer
bspwm - A tiling window manager based on binary space partitioning
pywal - 🎨 Generate and change color-schemes on the fly.
wslg - Enabling the Windows Subsystem for Linux to include support for Wayland and X server related scenarios
neofetch - 🖼️ A command-line system information tool written in bash 3.2+
xmonad - The core of xmonad, a small but functional ICCCM-compliant tiling window manager
tmux - tmux source code