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Tomas Baca edited this page Jun 18, 2018
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Thanks Luke Smith for inspiration.
- alt Enter open new terminal
- alt d run omnisearch menu
- alt h/j/k/l movement between windows
- alt 1/2/.../9 jump to workspace
- alt n/m jump to previous/next workspace
- alt tab cycle through windows on the current workspace
- alt shift q force-close the current window
- alt shift h/j/k/l rearanging windows
- alt shift 1/2/.../9 move window to other workspace
- alt shift 1/2/.../9 move window to other workspace
- alt [/] switching the direction of new window
- alt w switch window to tabbed mode
- alt e switch window to split mode
- alt x move workspace to the monitor on the righthand side
- alt f put window on focus in fullscrean
- alt b hide the i3bar
- alt shift space toggle float for the active window
- alt shift r restart i3
- alt shift x bring down the shutdown menu
- win c switch color scheme
-
alt r resize mode
- h/j/k/l resizes current window
- Esc exit the mode
-
alt c switch on "mouse" mode
- h/j/k/l moves mouse
- shift h/j/k/l moves mouse faster
- u left clock
- i right click
- b banish the mouse
- Esc Exit the mode
-
alt shift t switch on the "throughput" mode
- block the i3 from any key bindings, except the alt shift t for exiting the mode
- is useful for controlling other i3 using e.g. TeamViewer
For running external scripts using your preset shell, I created the detacher script.
Most of the time, I need my environment variables to be accessible in my scripts, however, the does not happing when you "just run the script".
The detacher.sh
launches a new tmux session and executes the desired commands in it.
Example: win c mapping for going to subdirectory and calling the set_colorscheme.sh
script, which utilized environment variables.
All happens assynchronously in tmux using the standard terminul environment.
bindsym $mod2+c exec "~/.i3/detacher.sh 'cd $GIT_PATH/linux-setup/scripts; ./set_colorscheme.sh'"