vertical-overview
gnome-static-background
vertical-overview | gnome-static-background | |
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21 | 3 | |
310 | 10 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
11 months ago | about 1 month ago | |
JavaScript | JavaScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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vertical-overview
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How much or little do you prefer to customize Fedora (GNOME) via extensions?
I happily used vanilla GNOME in the past for many years. Unfortunately they've been making some questionable changes recently, and now I need to use extensions to undo those changes... Essential extensions for me are Panel Corners, and either Vertical Overview or V-Shell.
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Extensions you can't live without?
Vertical Overview — To bring back the objectively superior vertical overview that was used to have with stock GNOME.
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Vertical Workspaces - an extension that gives you vertical workspace orientation and lets you customize the Activities Overview layout
How is this better or different than vertical overview? https://github.com/RensAlthuis/vertical-overview
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Gnome shell interface inverts when I set a right-to-left language. I don't want this. How do I revert this without changing my interface language?
Easier might be to look for existing extensions which ignore Clutter.TextDirection.* altogether, and try to recreate/improve the GNOME Shell from them. To Starte, perhaps you're interested in bringing the Vertical Overview back?, I think all dash-to-* extensions order icons from left-to-right, or have some setting to invert the order, some let you change the position of each element like dash-to-panel.
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[BUG] Windows in overview disappears after Lock Screen+Unlock
Possibly Related PR: https://github.com/RensAlthuis/vertical-overview/pull/79 (not sure)
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I extracted the code for my favorite feature in Vertical Overview: full-screen wallpaper in Overview
I'm used to horizontal workspaces and even prefer them, but the Vertical Overview extension had the feature of "static background" and "hide scaling workspaces" that I really liked. So, I extracted the code responsible for those into a new extension.
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Survey about vertical overview removal
I was and still am very disappointed with the overview changes. I'm someone who has happily used stock GNOME for years and years. I've always tried to avoid extensions and custom themes, as I actually like the stock experience and appreciate the design decisions the GNOME team has made. But this overview change I really just cannot agree with. It forced me to go to the vertical-overview extension, but unfortunately that isn't really the same as how it was.
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Anyone Using Gnome Without Extensions?
I was using GNOME without extensions for years, and loved it. Unfortunately with the latest release of GNOME I've had to start using the vertical-overview extension, since they redesigned the native overview screen in a way that's objectively inferior.
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Unpopular opinion: I used to dislike Gnome and it was my least favorite DE up until Gnome 40. The main reason I like it now is the horizontal workflow.
The icons are kind of useful, the Vertical Overview extension I use keeps them)
- Downgrading Gnome version on Fedora 34
gnome-static-background
What are some alternatives?
dash-to-dock - A dock for the Gnome Shell. This extension moves the dash out of the overview transforming it in a dock for an easier launching of applications and a faster switching between windows and desktops.
vertical-workspaces - V-Shell is a GNOME Shell extension that allows you to customize the layout and behavior of the Shell UI.
just-perfection-gnome-shell-desktop
gnome-shell-wsmatrix - GNOME shell extension to arrange workspaces in a two-dimensional grid with workspace thumbnails
dash-to-panel - An icon taskbar for the Gnome Shell. This extension moves the dash into the gnome main panel so that the application launchers and system tray are combined into a single panel, similar to that found in KDE Plasma and Windows 7+. A separate dock is no longer needed for easy access to running and favorited applications.
gnome-shell-extension-x11gestures - Enable GNOME Shell multi-touch gestures on X11 with this extension
dash-to-dock - A dock for the Gnome Shell. This extension moves the dash out of the overview transforming it in a dock for an easier launching of applications and a faster switching between windows and desktops.
dash-to-panel - An icon taskbar for the Gnome Shell. This extension moves the dash into the gnome main panel so that the application launchers and system tray are combined into a single panel, similar to that found in KDE Plasma and Windows 7+. A separate dock is no longer needed for easy access to running and favorited applications.
hide-panel - GNOME Shell extension
tmux-workspace-groupings - Easily create workspace-groupings in tmux
gnome-shell-extension-ddterm - Another drop down terminal extension for GNOME Shell. With tabs. Works on Wayland natively
svntogit-packages - Automatic import of svn 'packages' repo (read-only mirror)