kinto
Amethyst
Our great sponsors
kinto | Amethyst | |
---|---|---|
132 | 148 | |
4,081 | 14,125 | |
- | - | |
3.2 | 6.8 | |
about 1 month ago | 7 days ago | |
Python | Swift | |
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.
kinto
- RavynOS Finesse of macOS. Freedom of FreeBSD
-
Learn AutoHotKey by stealing my scripts
If you like macOS keyboard shortcuts, I recommend you checkout Kinto go Windows and Linux. On Windows, Kinto used AHK
However, at least when I set it up Kinto did not provide switching windows I’m this fashion. Here is the script I use.
```
; BRING FORWARD ALL WINDOWS OF THE CURRENT APPLICATION
-
Toshy v23.08: Mac-like per-app keyboard shortcuts. Now supports Solus 4.4.
The project was based on another project that's been around for a few years called Kinto, by Ben Reaves, which notably also has a Windows version (https://kinto.sh) using AutoHotkey. But has no Wayland support (at this time) in its Linux version.
-
Toshy v23.07: Mac-like per-app keyboard shortcuts. Supports Tumbleweed and Leap.
Toshy is based on Kinto.sh, by Ben Reaves (https://kinto.sh or https://github.com/rbreaves/kinto). Kinto is basically an extensive keymapper config that not only shifts modifier keys appropriately for different keyboard types, but has full keymaps for a number of different apps like VSCode. My variant of Kinto adds some features and utilities for managing the services that make it work, and tools like a script to change the function keys mode of any keyboard that uses hid_apple. That means MacBook keyboards mostly, but also some non-Apple keyboards with media keys apparently use that driver module.
- Toshy v23.07: Mac-like per-app keyboard shortcuts on KDE (supports Wayland+KDE)
-
Swap alt and win keys using command line
I don’t know if you can activate it via a keyboard shortcut, but I use Kinto.sh to swap keys on my MacBooks.
-
Macbook keyboard type for Fedora
Hello, there's an open issue about this in their repo: https://github.com/rbreaves/kinto/issues/772
-
emergency mac user,can i make it more linux?
There is a setting in keyboard preferences for that.However if you can get yourself used to macOS shortcuts I highly recommend doing so as they seem to be superior especially if you are a programmer and use the terminal a lot, as on macOS you can simply use Command+C to copy from a terminal and Ctrl+C still works for sending SIGINT. Also Command+, will open preferences for almost every application on macOS. Shortcuts on macOS are very consistent across many apps unlike on Linux or Windows. After you get your Linux laptop back you can continue using these shortcuts thanks to a tool called kinto.sh.
-
Keyd: Linux Key Remapper
Tangential: I'm currently looking for a way to map Mac-style shortcuts on Linux (e. g. Meta + C/V for copy / paste). The only thing I know is https://kinto.sh/, but it looks a bit too janky to my taste. Any other ideas?
-
Reviving an old MacBook with Linux? Do these immediately.
And nothing about installing my https://kinto.sh app?
Amethyst
- Yabai – A tiling window manager for macOS
- Amethyst
-
It's been almost 9 months since Ventura was released. What's your thoughts about "Stage Manager"?
I'm using amethyst as my Window manager, and I'm feeling fine
-
Window manager that behaves like on WindowsOS?
And for the second part, we have Wins to manually drag and set the window position, and Amethyst to set it automatically.
-
[Serious] I don't get why people like Mac and I feel like I'm missing out
If you find the native window management lackluster (like I do), you can install a window manager like Amethyst, or yabai, veeer, or many others.
-
i3 Linux -> macOS
I also used Amethyst, but I think yabai is much better
-
Witch – macOS window switcher replacement
Amethyst is my tiling manager of choice for macOS: https://ianyh.com/amethyst/
It was a little buggy when Ventura dropped, but it gets frequent updates and has stabilized in the past few months.
-
How to tile (auto-fit) all open windows on the screen? Example: If you have 8 windows open, you want to auto-fit all 8 windows on the same screen. What about 3rd party apps?
This can be done through third party programs such as amethyst. It's not a native feature unless I am mistakened.
-
Software Developer Mac Apps
`cask "amethyst"` [link][oss] for `i3` like window management
-
Are We Sixel Yet
> tmux helps all 3, but not particular good at either.
iTerm2 on macOS has some nice tmux integration[1]. Basically, you run a tmux session (using tmux -CC), but the actual window management on the client side is handled by iTerm2. This works pretty nicely with the tiling WM (Amethyst[2]) I use on macOS.
If anybody is aware of Wayland compositors that integrate similarly, please let me know. I'd love to be able to do the same on my linux machines.
What are some alternatives?
autohotkey-windows-mac-keyboard - AutoHotkey Mappings to emulate OSX behaviour with a Mac keyboard on Windows
Rectangle - Move and resize windows on macOS with keyboard shortcuts and snap areas
touchegg - Linux multi-touch gesture recognizer
yabai - A tiling window manager for macOS based on binary space partitioning
keyd - A key remapping daemon for linux.
i3-gaps - i3-gaps – i3 with more features (forked from https://github.com/i3/i3)
AutoKey - AutoKey, a desktop automation utility for Linux and X11.
exwm - Emacs X Window Manager
Unshaky - A software attempt to address the "double key press" issue on Apple's butterfly keyboard [not actively maintained]
i3-multimonitor-workspace - i3wm Multi-Monitor workspace
espanso - Cross-platform Text Expander written in Rust
skhd - Simple hotkey daemon for macOS