gnome-shell-pano
argos
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gnome-shell-pano | argos | |
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21 | 14 | |
874 | 1,635 | |
- | - | |
7.1 | 1.7 | |
5 days ago | 26 days ago | |
TypeScript | JavaScript | |
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.
gnome-shell-pano
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Does Debian 12 have a clipboard history?
It depends on the desktop environment, if you are using GNOME I personally recommend Pano, I think is the best extension for clipboard. Just make sure to install the dependencies before install the extension: Pano: Clipboard GNOME
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Looking for developers with experience developing Gnome Extensions
I know that this is possible in gnome because Pano (https://extensions.gnome.org/extension/5278/pano/) is doing it, but I don't really know to make an extension.
- How come there is no proper clipboard manager in Ubuntu?
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clipboard
I recently switched to Pano and have been pretty happy with it.
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A concept I've made for a clipboard manager following some of the GNOME shell designs. What do you think?
Yes, the first concept I've made was a redesign for it https://github.com/oae/gnome-shell-pano/issues/185
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Writing (copying) code is pain...
In Gnome I use Pano for this.
- How to install pano in silverblue
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My Fedora 38 setup:
Pano - Clipboard Manager (by: alperenelhan) https://extensions.gnome.org/extension/5278/pano/
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What is the best GUI based clipboard?
Pano Gnome extension
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What are your must-have extensions?
Reading the comments I've discovered Pano Clipboard Manager and I'm blown away. I've been using Clipboard indicator for years because it's the only one I could find, but man Pano it's just on another level.
argos
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Lobotomizing Gnome
Good observation.
Turning off extensions is where OP lost me. In the last year, the single biggest quality of life improvement for me has been discovering the Argos[0] extension, which basically lets you put whatever text/menus you want in the top bar by writing scripts that print to stdout. To save space, I hid the dock (I use [1] as a replacement alt-tab), so the top bar is the only piece of screen that isn't OS chrome.
On my top bar right now I have the time in four time zones (including the ever-important UTC to save a mental calculation when logging at logs), the name of the current Wifi access point, and some VPN details gleaned using a combination of ip r, ping, nc, and curl. Another extension shows free RAM. I look at them dozens of times a day.
[0] https://extensions.gnome.org/extension/1176/argos/
[1] https://gist.github.com/cbd32/cbec9a32b32bd9e93b0d2696c71b5f...
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The curse of being good in IT
I’ve heard this called “the defaults lifestyle” on the Software Defined Talk podcast. I’m forever locked out of nirvana because I have an iPhone but not a Mac, but that’s fine.
Occasionally plugins are worth the expense though. I finally discovered Argos[0] and I’m using it to show time in UTC and a couple other time zones. Super handy.
But if I try some new software and find that I have to tweak it a bunch to make it usable, that means the devs have different aesthetics and I should probably try something else.
[0] https://extensions.gnome.org/extension/1176/argos/
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What are your must-have extensions?
I'm really surprised no one mentioned Argos
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Extension download count is now available to the public
Currently, Argos extension (not developed since 3.32) holding the records for more than 13.8M downloads following by Dash to Dock extension with 6.2M downloads.
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How would I go about creating my own title-bar app icon?
This is what I was referring to.
- Ask HN: Can I see your scripts?
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Extension for focused window in top bar?
If you want, you could make the extension yourself via Argos https://github.com/p-e-w/argos using https://www.semicomplete.com/projects/xdotool/ or using one of these https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/38867/is-it-possible-to-retrieve-the-active-window-process-title-in-gnome/122870
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Kargos: Terminal Widget
Hey Recently I found this widget named Kargos that shows terminal command output as a widget it uses Gnome's argos and BitBar (Mac) This gives a very nice opportunity to make your own custom widget.
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What extensions do you use?
Argos
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Looking for an extension to run custom scripts
There is Argos. However, maintenance is unclear since the original developer steps down.
What are some alternatives?
gnome-shell-extension-clipboard-indicator - The most popular clipboard manager for GNOME, with over 1M downloads
gnome-shell-wsmatrix - GNOME shell extension to arrange workspaces in a two-dimensional grid with workspace thumbnails
clipmenu - Clipboard management using dmenu
bitbar - Put the output from any script or program into your macOS Menu Bar (the BitBar reboot)
searchprovider-for-browser-tabs - Browser tab search provider for GNOME
gnome-shell-extension-freon - Shows CPU temperature, disk temperature, video card temperature (NVIDIA/Catalyst/Bumblebee&NVIDIA), voltage and fan RPM
gnome-display-brightness-ddcutil - Display brightness slider for gnome shell using ddcutil backend
emoji-selector-for-gnome - This extension provide a popup menu with some emojis ; clicking on an emoji copies it to the clipboard.
rounded-window-corners - A gnome-shell extensions that try to add rounded corners for all windows
apple-music-mpris - Unofficial Electron wrapper for Apple Music that integrates with Mpris to provide external media playback controls.
gnome-shell-extension-ddterm - Another drop down terminal extension for GNOME Shell. With tabs. Works on Wayland natively
custom-hot-corners-extended - A GNOME Shell Extension that allows you to give a function to any corner or edge of your monitors and expand your keyboard capabilities.