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  3. Linux brains…

Linux brains…

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  • securitywriter@infosec.exchangeS securitywriter@infosec.exchange

    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.

    froge@social.glitched.systemsF This user is from outside of this forum
    froge@social.glitched.systemsF This user is from outside of this forum
    froge@social.glitched.systems
    wrote last edited by
    #11

    @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

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    • thetomas@social.toot9.deT thetomas@social.toot9.de

      @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.

      ertain@mast.linuxgamecast.comE This user is from outside of this forum
      ertain@mast.linuxgamecast.comE This user is from outside of this forum
      ertain@mast.linuxgamecast.com
      wrote last edited by
      #12

      @TheTomas I use something like this on KDE. It's a nice little feature.

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      • securitywriter@infosec.exchangeS securitywriter@infosec.exchange

        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.

        nickgully@mefi.socialN This user is from outside of this forum
        nickgully@mefi.socialN This user is from outside of this forum
        nickgully@mefi.social
        wrote last edited by
        #13

        @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.

        Link Preview Image
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        • musing_sys@social.fringesec.caM musing_sys@social.fringesec.ca
          @SecurityWriter That sounds handy... went looking. Touchegg appears to be what you're looking for
          https://www.baeldung.com/linux/touchpad-gestures
          musing_sys@social.fringesec.caM This user is from outside of this forum
          musing_sys@social.fringesec.caM This user is from outside of this forum
          musing_sys@social.fringesec.ca
          wrote last edited by
          #14
          @SecurityWriter oh, not having any reason to look previously... Linux Mint Cinnamon has it baked in apparently, just needs to be enabled
          Link Preview Image
          securitywriter@infosec.exchangeS 1 Reply Last reply
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          • R relay@relay.an.exchange shared this topic
          • securitywriter@infosec.exchangeS securitywriter@infosec.exchange

            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.

            gllmr@social.gllmr.frG This user is from outside of this forum
            gllmr@social.gllmr.frG This user is from outside of this forum
            gllmr@social.gllmr.fr
            wrote last edited by
            #15
            @SecurityWriter You can use 4 fingers ? I thinks it's implemented in gnome and KDE.
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            • securitywriter@infosec.exchangeS securitywriter@infosec.exchange

              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.

              lascapi@social.tchncs.deL This user is from outside of this forum
              lascapi@social.tchncs.deL This user is from outside of this forum
              lascapi@social.tchncs.de
              wrote last edited by
              #16

              @SecurityWriter
              > MacOS creates a workspace when you make an app full screen

              I 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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              • securitywriter@infosec.exchangeS securitywriter@infosec.exchange

                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.

                jon@activitypub.blankpad.netJ This user is from outside of this forum
                jon@activitypub.blankpad.netJ This user is from outside of this forum
                jon@activitypub.blankpad.net
                wrote last edited by
                #17

                @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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                • fishd@infosec.exchangeF fishd@infosec.exchange

                  @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.

                  thetomas@social.toot9.deT This user is from outside of this forum
                  thetomas@social.toot9.deT This user is from outside of this forum
                  thetomas@social.toot9.de
                  wrote last edited by
                  #18

                  @Fishd @SecurityWriter Yep, but there's an Gnome Extension for this (I do not use it, just FYI)

                  Link Preview Image
                  Maximize To Workspace With History - GNOME Shell Extensions

                  favicon

                  (extensions.gnome.org)

                  These are the Extensions I am using:

                  Link Preview Image
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                  • securitywriter@infosec.exchangeS securitywriter@infosec.exchange

                    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.

                    gmthor@ioc.exchangeG This user is from outside of this forum
                    gmthor@ioc.exchangeG This user is from outside of this forum
                    gmthor@ioc.exchange
                    wrote last edited by
                    #19

                    @SecurityWriter try tiling and pop! os

                    Different workflows, but same ideas

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                    • securitywriter@infosec.exchangeS securitywriter@infosec.exchange

                      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.

                      roccorakete@troet.cafeR This user is from outside of this forum
                      roccorakete@troet.cafeR This user is from outside of this forum
                      roccorakete@troet.cafe
                      wrote last edited by
                      #20

                      @SecurityWriter there is FullScreenify for KDE Plasma, it does the the Fullscreen Thing. Touch Gestures should work oob.

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                      • securitywriter@infosec.exchangeS securitywriter@infosec.exchange

                        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.

                        cazabon@mindly.socialC This user is from outside of this forum
                        cazabon@mindly.socialC This user is from outside of this forum
                        cazabon@mindly.social
                        wrote last edited by
                        #21

                        @SecurityWriter

                        There's the actual multiple workspaces thing that's been around forever - not exactly like the Mac version, but lets you easily flip between different desktops / screens full of windows / whatever.

                        I use Cinnamon, so once you configure multiple workspaces, you can switch with ctrl-alt-left-arrow and -right-arrow. I don't recall if the hotkeys are different in Gnome or KDE or whatever, and I haven't used those in a decade or more, so I'd probably be wrong anyway - but every desktop at least used to support the same thing.

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                        • musing_sys@social.fringesec.caM musing_sys@social.fringesec.ca
                          @SecurityWriter That sounds handy... went looking. Touchegg appears to be what you're looking for
                          https://www.baeldung.com/linux/touchpad-gestures
                          9lore@donotsta.re9 This user is from outside of this forum
                          9lore@donotsta.re9 This user is from outside of this forum
                          9lore@donotsta.re
                          wrote last edited by
                          #22

                          @musing_sys@social.fringesec.ca @SecurityWriter@infosec.exchange This looks very outdated. All functionality shown in the article is long since part of base gnome at this point.

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                          • sheogorath@microblog.shivering-isles.comS sheogorath@microblog.shivering-isles.com

                            @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?

                            securitywriter@infosec.exchangeS This user is from outside of this forum
                            securitywriter@infosec.exchangeS This user is from outside of this forum
                            securitywriter@infosec.exchange
                            wrote last edited by
                            #23

                            @sheogorath yeah, MacOS makes full screen apps their own ‘workspaces’ but good to know the other piece is there.

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                            • musing_sys@social.fringesec.caM musing_sys@social.fringesec.ca
                              @SecurityWriter oh, not having any reason to look previously... Linux Mint Cinnamon has it baked in apparently, just needs to be enabled
                              Link Preview Image
                              securitywriter@infosec.exchangeS This user is from outside of this forum
                              securitywriter@infosec.exchangeS This user is from outside of this forum
                              securitywriter@infosec.exchange
                              wrote last edited by
                              #24

                              @musing_sys appreciated, I’ll have a look!

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