Since I like FreeBSD so much on my server I installed it on my crappy unstable laptop as well. I only use it for browsing, editing notes and video conferencing when working from home, so I need no complex setup.
From top to bottom:
- Output of
fastfetch
, an openneovim
and my wallpaper switcher. The bar iseww
. - A second workspace with Firefox and my notes.
- My “logout window”. Pressing a key combo will show this overlay with the option to close it or pick shutdown/reboot/logout.
Not pictured is fuzzel
for running applications.
A few minor things still need to be done but nothing major will change.
Not at all, I still had to store the stuff in git anyway. Here you go: https://github.com/lindely/laptop
Thank you kindly. Cool, I see we had about the same solution of handling workspaces and their switching, conceptually.
I use this bash script, currently:
#!/bin/bash print_workspaces() { i3-msg -t get_workspaces \ | jq -c 'map({num,name,visible,focused,urgent,empty:false}) + ([range(1;11)] | map({num:.,name:.,visible:false,focused:false,urgent:false,empty:true})) | unique_by(.num)' } print_workspaces if [ "$1" = subscribe ] then i3-msg -m -t subscribe '["workspace"]' | \ while read do print_workspaces done fi
I also want to print numbers for workspaces that don’t exist (yet) so that there’s more consistency in the bar numbers. I guess I’m getting old…
Not being able to print unused workspaces is just a weird thing for me as well, but I’m also someone who would be called “old” by certain age groups. I have never used i3 so I wouldn’t know how to achieve that there…
I achieve it with my script above. I conceptually just pad the gaps in the existing workspace data with the missing workspaces and add some extra data to tell eww which workspaces are “real” and which are non-existent/empty.