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Phoenix Alternatives
Similar projects and alternatives to phoenix
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displayplacer
macOS command line utility to configure multi-display resolutions and arrangements. Essentially XRandR for macOS.
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hammerspoon
A hammerspoon config with a bunch of custom spoons (sleep timer, resolution changer, paywall buster, safari hotkey utilities, window management with undo, etc). (by nonissue)
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Appwrite
Appwrite - The Open Source Firebase alternative introduces iOS support. Appwrite is an open source backend server that helps you build native iOS applications much faster with realtime APIs for authentication, databases, files storage, cloud functions and much more!
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Rectangle
Move and resize windows on macOS with keyboard shortcuts and snap areas
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Translate-for-Hammerspoon
Google Cloud Translation API integration to Hammerspoon
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SonarLint
Clean code begins in your IDE with SonarLint. Up your coding game and discover issues early. SonarLint is a free plugin that helps you find & fix bugs and security issues from the moment you start writing code. Install from your favorite IDE marketplace today.
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dot-hammerspoon
My personal Hammerspoon configuration - mirrored from GitLab
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slate
A window management application (replacement for Divvy/SizeUp/ShiftIt) (by jigish)
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ohmyzsh
🙃 A delightful community-driven (with 2,100+ contributors) framework for managing your zsh configuration. Includes 300+ optional plugins (rails, git, macOS, hub, docker, homebrew, node, php, python, etc), 140+ themes to spice up your morning, and an auto-update tool so that makes it easy to keep up with the latest updates from the community.
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InfluxDB
Access the most powerful time series database as a service. Ingest, store, & analyze all types of time series data in a fully-managed, purpose-built database. Keep data forever with low-cost storage and superior data compression.
phoenix reviews and mentions
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Hyprland, a dynamic tiling Wayland compositor that doesn't sacrifice on looks
Actually, if you're interested at all, I just, after literally months of reading about this, found a pretty sick solution.
Have you ever heard of Phoenix? https://github.com/kasper/phoenix/. Despite googling around for this exact topic, with 3.8k stars I had never heard of it. Apparently someone has created slim, JS scriptable interface that is basically tailor made toward creating your own tiling WM. I just installed it and loaded one of the examples: https://github.com/nik3daz/spin2win. And what it does is basically ignores the built-in spaces and creates truly virtual desktops by just hiding and resizing windows. And it works pretty well. The response time between switching "desktops" is basically instant.
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What tools or systems do you use to manage your time, improve your productivity or to make your life easier?
Phoenix - Window and App Management
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Has anyone made the switch from developing in Windows to macOS? Any general or specific advice about the switch?
Get a window tiler. At the very least, you'll want one that can maximize (not fullscreen) and split windows in different configurations. Some options here are Rectangle, BetterTouchTool, or Phoenix if you like to tweak and customize.
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Just got a Mac, what are some of your must-have apps and software to have on it?
I like Phoenix, since you can program it exactly to your needs in any flavor of JavaScript.
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Can someone suggest a good window resizing manager that organizes your open windows? Thanks!
phoenix: https://github.com/kasper/phoenix
- All* my macOS keyboard shortcuts
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Hammerspoon – Lua-based powerful tool automation of macOS
I've been using Phoenix (https://github.com/kasper/phoenix), which is hackable in JavaScript and has a smaller scope (only window management), but haven't found it compelling enough to keep hacking at my config, so I'm back to Moom (https://manytricks.com/moom/), which would be perfect if it supported chaining sequences of sizing instructions (i.e., tile a window twice to the left to turn it from 1/2 to 1/3 width).
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Why doesn't my Mac "remember" arrangement of external displays if I unplug it?
I use 2 things to fix this, DisplayPlacer which sets my monitors correctly and a framework called Phoenix for positioning my windows. I can't recommend Phoenix unless you want to write code but don't let DisplayPlacer scare you off, it's very easy to use.
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Workspacer: A tiling window manager for Windows 10
It's not the same thing at all, in the sense that this is very much keyboard-driven whereas FancyZones is mouse-driven.
Think of it as XMonad-like, with permanently tiled, auto-arranged windows (see https://workspacer.org/screenshots/) and able to move/rotate windows using keyboard alone.
I use FancyZones a lot and am currently trying to find a Mac analogue - nothing does "drop and place" the same way, so I've adopted https://github.com/kasper/phoenix and implemented XMonad-like tiling in a couple of hours:
https://gist.github.com/rcarmo/1daccbe9abbbb5c133b7b48d05cc0...
...in comparison, I have yet to build a FancyZones equivalent since mouse handling requires a completely different logic when doing window placement (I have to grab the current window frame, figure out if it matches a predefined zone, etc.).
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A note from our sponsor - InfluxDB
www.influxdata.com | 25 Mar 2023
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kasper/phoenix is an open source project licensed under GNU General Public License v3.0 or later which is an OSI approved license.