Linux brains…
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Linux brains…
You know how MacOS creates a workspace when you make an app full screen, and you can gesture with three fingers between them… is there a Linux equivalent? It probably has a pretentious name, but I don’t store them in the ol’ melon.
Windows’ implementation is terrible. So that’s the baseline.
I’ve seen workspaces in Linux for decades now, but it’s been pretty clunky comparatively. I can’t tell you how productive this really simple interaction makes me.
Some of it is likely down to the MacBook touchpads being the gold standard, but I do have a Lenovo one that isn’t terrible.
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Linux brains…
You know how MacOS creates a workspace when you make an app full screen, and you can gesture with three fingers between them… is there a Linux equivalent? It probably has a pretentious name, but I don’t store them in the ol’ melon.
Windows’ implementation is terrible. So that’s the baseline.
I’ve seen workspaces in Linux for decades now, but it’s been pretty clunky comparatively. I can’t tell you how productive this really simple interaction makes me.
Some of it is likely down to the MacBook touchpads being the gold standard, but I do have a Lenovo one that isn’t terrible.
@SecurityWriter Switchting between workspaces on GNOME works with the 3 finger gesture as well.
Do you mean something else? Something that MacOS does, that is more than switching between Workspaces?
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Linux brains…
You know how MacOS creates a workspace when you make an app full screen, and you can gesture with three fingers between them… is there a Linux equivalent? It probably has a pretentious name, but I don’t store them in the ol’ melon.
Windows’ implementation is terrible. So that’s the baseline.
I’ve seen workspaces in Linux for decades now, but it’s been pretty clunky comparatively. I can’t tell you how productive this really simple interaction makes me.
Some of it is likely down to the MacBook touchpads being the gold standard, but I do have a Lenovo one that isn’t terrible.
@SecurityWriter That sounds handy... went looking. Touchegg appears to be what you're looking for
https://www.baeldung.com/linux/touchpad-gestures -
Linux brains…
You know how MacOS creates a workspace when you make an app full screen, and you can gesture with three fingers between them… is there a Linux equivalent? It probably has a pretentious name, but I don’t store them in the ol’ melon.
Windows’ implementation is terrible. So that’s the baseline.
I’ve seen workspaces in Linux for decades now, but it’s been pretty clunky comparatively. I can’t tell you how productive this really simple interaction makes me.
Some of it is likely down to the MacBook touchpads being the gold standard, but I do have a Lenovo one that isn’t terrible.
@SecurityWriter As Ex-Apple User I do understand you in missing Expose and other gestures. For me Gnome with its 3-finger Swipes works perfectly on a Thinkpad T480.
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@SecurityWriter As Ex-Apple User I do understand you in missing Expose and other gestures. For me Gnome with its 3-finger Swipes works perfectly on a Thinkpad T480.
@TheTomas ahah! Do you find it as responsive? I think that’s the real defining difference from the “we have that at home” implementations I’ve tried.
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Linux brains…
You know how MacOS creates a workspace when you make an app full screen, and you can gesture with three fingers between them… is there a Linux equivalent? It probably has a pretentious name, but I don’t store them in the ol’ melon.
Windows’ implementation is terrible. So that’s the baseline.
I’ve seen workspaces in Linux for decades now, but it’s been pretty clunky comparatively. I can’t tell you how productive this really simple interaction makes me.
Some of it is likely down to the MacBook touchpads being the gold standard, but I do have a Lenovo one that isn’t terrible.
@SecurityWriter good question.
Pretty shure @ubuntu / #UbuntuLTS is emulating that on it's #GnomeDesktop.
- Worst-case there's some Gnome extension to copy #macOS Workspace behaviour.
- Just like there's #WinTile for using
Super-Key based shortcuts (which were introduced with #WindowsVista) likeSuper+TabandSuper+Arrow-Keys to quickly switch between Application #Windows and arrange them on the screen without needing to use the mouse entirely...
- Just like there's #WinTile for using
- Worst-case there's some Gnome extension to copy #macOS Workspace behaviour.
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Linux brains…
You know how MacOS creates a workspace when you make an app full screen, and you can gesture with three fingers between them… is there a Linux equivalent? It probably has a pretentious name, but I don’t store them in the ol’ melon.
Windows’ implementation is terrible. So that’s the baseline.
I’ve seen workspaces in Linux for decades now, but it’s been pretty clunky comparatively. I can’t tell you how productive this really simple interaction makes me.
Some of it is likely down to the MacBook touchpads being the gold standard, but I do have a Lenovo one that isn’t terrible.
@SecurityWriter the 3 finger gestures are standard in DEs like gnome and KDE Plasma; other WMs like Sway also support that but you need to configure them yourself.
For windows getting automatically sent to a new workspace when made fullscreen, you'd need something specific to your DE/WM. (can't really point you to any specific solutions for that because it's one of the macOS behaviours which I find most confusing) -
Linux brains…
You know how MacOS creates a workspace when you make an app full screen, and you can gesture with three fingers between them… is there a Linux equivalent? It probably has a pretentious name, but I don’t store them in the ol’ melon.
Windows’ implementation is terrible. So that’s the baseline.
I’ve seen workspaces in Linux for decades now, but it’s been pretty clunky comparatively. I can’t tell you how productive this really simple interaction makes me.
Some of it is likely down to the MacBook touchpads being the gold standard, but I do have a Lenovo one that isn’t terrible.
@SecurityWriter That sounds a bit like a scrolling window manager, which is similar to a tilling window manager, but hadt the ability to create new screens for full-screen windows that you can get to through various means (I'm sure you could do it with that gesture). The workspace system is then on top of that, so you get several scrolling workspaces.
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@TheTomas ahah! Do you find it as responsive? I think that’s the real defining difference from the “we have that at home” implementations I’ve tried.
@SecurityWriter @TheTomas The gesture works well, but Gnome doesn’t have the maximise-to-a-new-workspace feature as far as I know.
You might be able to make something using KWin in KDE … but it’d need to be handcrafted and there are some apps that don’t play well with KWin.
Signed, a Mac user who is also trying to switch to Linux.
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Linux brains…
You know how MacOS creates a workspace when you make an app full screen, and you can gesture with three fingers between them… is there a Linux equivalent? It probably has a pretentious name, but I don’t store them in the ol’ melon.
Windows’ implementation is terrible. So that’s the baseline.
I’ve seen workspaces in Linux for decades now, but it’s been pretty clunky comparatively. I can’t tell you how productive this really simple interaction makes me.
Some of it is likely down to the MacBook touchpads being the gold standard, but I do have a Lenovo one that isn’t terrible.
@SecurityWriter in i3, those are also workspaces. mod key plus a number jumps right to them (I use the windows key for mod), mod+shift+number flings windows to them, use the arrow keys for running up and down through them.
I have to use macOS for work; I use linux and i3 on my own laptop; and it's only the work laptop where five or six times a week I have to take a deep breath to stop myself standing up, opening a window and flinging the fucking thing out into the void in frustration.
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Linux brains…
You know how MacOS creates a workspace when you make an app full screen, and you can gesture with three fingers between them… is there a Linux equivalent? It probably has a pretentious name, but I don’t store them in the ol’ melon.
Windows’ implementation is terrible. So that’s the baseline.
I’ve seen workspaces in Linux for decades now, but it’s been pretty clunky comparatively. I can’t tell you how productive this really simple interaction makes me.
Some of it is likely down to the MacBook touchpads being the gold standard, but I do have a Lenovo one that isn’t terrible.
@SecurityWriter@infosec.exchange it depends hugely on the desktop environment, I believe in KDE there is a way to keybind this and/or attach it to mouse gestures
as for how well that works with a touch pad, I don't know since I use keybinds heavily, but I think it'd work at least -
@SecurityWriter As Ex-Apple User I do understand you in missing Expose and other gestures. For me Gnome with its 3-finger Swipes works perfectly on a Thinkpad T480.
@TheTomas I use something like this on KDE. It's a nice little feature.
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Linux brains…
You know how MacOS creates a workspace when you make an app full screen, and you can gesture with three fingers between them… is there a Linux equivalent? It probably has a pretentious name, but I don’t store them in the ol’ melon.
Windows’ implementation is terrible. So that’s the baseline.
I’ve seen workspaces in Linux for decades now, but it’s been pretty clunky comparatively. I can’t tell you how productive this really simple interaction makes me.
Some of it is likely down to the MacBook touchpads being the gold standard, but I do have a Lenovo one that isn’t terrible.
@SecurityWriter Gnome workspaces respond to three finger swipes, but I prefer Ctrl+<left arrow> and Ctrl+<right arrow> bindings so I never take my hands off the keyboard.
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@SecurityWriter That sounds handy... went looking. Touchegg appears to be what you're looking for
https://www.baeldung.com/linux/touchpad-gestures@SecurityWriter oh, not having any reason to look previously... Linux Mint Cinnamon has it baked in apparently, just needs to be enabled
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R relay@relay.an.exchange shared this topic
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Linux brains…
You know how MacOS creates a workspace when you make an app full screen, and you can gesture with three fingers between them… is there a Linux equivalent? It probably has a pretentious name, but I don’t store them in the ol’ melon.
Windows’ implementation is terrible. So that’s the baseline.
I’ve seen workspaces in Linux for decades now, but it’s been pretty clunky comparatively. I can’t tell you how productive this really simple interaction makes me.
Some of it is likely down to the MacBook touchpads being the gold standard, but I do have a Lenovo one that isn’t terrible.
@SecurityWriter You can use 4 fingers ? I thinks it's implemented in gnome and KDE. -
Linux brains…
You know how MacOS creates a workspace when you make an app full screen, and you can gesture with three fingers between them… is there a Linux equivalent? It probably has a pretentious name, but I don’t store them in the ol’ melon.
Windows’ implementation is terrible. So that’s the baseline.
I’ve seen workspaces in Linux for decades now, but it’s been pretty clunky comparatively. I can’t tell you how productive this really simple interaction makes me.
Some of it is likely down to the MacBook touchpads being the gold standard, but I do have a Lenovo one that isn’t terrible.
@SecurityWriter
> MacOS creates a workspace when you make an app full screenI like that but I don't know how to do that with #gnome or #kde unfortunately.
For the three fingers gesture, I guess it was not your main question and there is a lot of answer.
I didn't try to create a window rule with KDE, maybe it is possible to achieve that actually!! ( that's a #question for someone that use #plasma )
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Linux brains…
You know how MacOS creates a workspace when you make an app full screen, and you can gesture with three fingers between them… is there a Linux equivalent? It probably has a pretentious name, but I don’t store them in the ol’ melon.
Windows’ implementation is terrible. So that’s the baseline.
I’ve seen workspaces in Linux for decades now, but it’s been pretty clunky comparatively. I can’t tell you how productive this really simple interaction makes me.
Some of it is likely down to the MacBook touchpads being the gold standard, but I do have a Lenovo one that isn’t terrible.
@SecurityWriter the window manager Niri is that if it was considered holistically alongside everything else rather than an afterthought made mostly to look nice.
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@SecurityWriter @TheTomas The gesture works well, but Gnome doesn’t have the maximise-to-a-new-workspace feature as far as I know.
You might be able to make something using KWin in KDE … but it’d need to be handcrafted and there are some apps that don’t play well with KWin.
Signed, a Mac user who is also trying to switch to Linux.
@Fishd @SecurityWriter Yep, but there's an Gnome Extension for this (I do not use it, just FYI)
These are the Extensions I am using:

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Linux brains…
You know how MacOS creates a workspace when you make an app full screen, and you can gesture with three fingers between them… is there a Linux equivalent? It probably has a pretentious name, but I don’t store them in the ol’ melon.
Windows’ implementation is terrible. So that’s the baseline.
I’ve seen workspaces in Linux for decades now, but it’s been pretty clunky comparatively. I can’t tell you how productive this really simple interaction makes me.
Some of it is likely down to the MacBook touchpads being the gold standard, but I do have a Lenovo one that isn’t terrible.
@SecurityWriter try tiling and pop! os
Different workflows, but same ideas
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Linux brains…
You know how MacOS creates a workspace when you make an app full screen, and you can gesture with three fingers between them… is there a Linux equivalent? It probably has a pretentious name, but I don’t store them in the ol’ melon.
Windows’ implementation is terrible. So that’s the baseline.
I’ve seen workspaces in Linux for decades now, but it’s been pretty clunky comparatively. I can’t tell you how productive this really simple interaction makes me.
Some of it is likely down to the MacBook touchpads being the gold standard, but I do have a Lenovo one that isn’t terrible.
@SecurityWriter there is FullScreenify for KDE Plasma, it does the the Fullscreen Thing. Touch Gestures should work oob.