Note: This currently only works with Wayland-based desktop environments.
A modern, minimalist, semi-transparent fullscreen "drop-down" terminal emulateur for freedesktop.org-compatible desktops (e.g. GNOME, KDE).
It omits many features common in other terminal emulators, such as tabs, because it's meant to be used in conjunction with a terminal multiplexer such as tmux, which has a solid, mature UI. See also tmux mode for enhanced tmux features.
Based on VTE.
Whichever process runs terminalle
is the "server".
Use D-Bus to control it.
# See usage info.
terminalle --help
# Start the server (in this case, as a background job).
# The window is initially hidden by default.
# This is unnecessary if you've enabled auto-start with `terminalle auto`.
terminalle &
# Toggle window visibility.
dbus-send --session --type=method_call --dest=party.will.Terminalle \
/party/will/Terminalle party.will.Terminalle.Toggle
# Close the window and kill the server.
dbus-send --session --type=method_call --dest=party.will.Terminalle \
/party/will/Terminalle party.will.Terminalle.Quit
In addition to Toggle
and Quit
,
there are four methods to move the terminal window between monitors:
MoveRight
, MoveLeft
, MoveDown
, and MoveUp
,
each of which moves the window to the next adjacent monitor in a particular direction.
This only works while the window is open.
See shortcuts for info on mapping keybindings to these D-Bus methods.
Use Ctrl+Shift+C
and Ctrl+Shift+V
to access the clipboard.
pip install terminalle
# Optional: Enable auto-start.
# Starts the server automatically (window hidden) on login
# and restarts automatically on toggle if closed.
terminalle auto
# Optional: Disable auto-start.
# If enabled, it should be disabled prior to uninstalling.
terminalle no-auto
You almost certainly want to hook up the toggle method to a keybinding for easy access.
In GNOME, you can either do that in the GNOME Control Center (a.k.a "Settings"),
or with gsettings
:
# WARNING: Running this verbatim will disable any existing custom keybindings.
# It's an example.
gsettings set org.gnome.settings-daemon.plugins.media-keys custom-keybindings "['/org/gnome/settings-daemon/plugins/media-keys/custom-keybindings/custom0/']"
# WARNING: This will overwrite any existing custom keybinding called 'custom0'.
gsettings set org.gnome.settings-daemon.plugins.media-keys.custom-keybinding:/org/gnome/settings-daemon/plugins/media-keys/custom-keybindings/custom0/ name "Toggle Terminalle"
gsettings set org.gnome.settings-daemon.plugins.media-keys.custom-keybinding:/org/gnome/settings-daemon/plugins/media-keys/custom-keybindings/custom0/ command "dbus-send --session --type=method_call --dest=party.will.Terminalle /party/will/Terminalle party.will.Terminalle.Toggle"
gsettings set org.gnome.settings-daemon.plugins.media-keys.custom-keybinding:/org/gnome/settings-daemon/plugins/media-keys/custom-keybindings/custom0/ binding "<Super>Return"
If you use multiple monitors, consider hooking up shortcuts for the aforementioned movement methods as well.
KDE can configure shortcuts to call D-Bus methods directly.
See an example configuration. See the defaults in settings.py
.
Defaults can be selectively overridden in
${XDG_CONFIG_HOME:-${HOME}/.config}/terminalle.yaml
.
This is the recommended way to use Terminalle.
It enables some alternative tmux keyboard shortcuts,
which would normally be impossible to configure in .tmux.conf
since terminal emulators typically cannot handle these key combinations.
Generally replacing the tmux prefix with a simple Ctrl
modifier,
it cuts the number of keystrokes in half
without requiring you to memorize new shortcuts.
If you're a tmux power-user, this will change things for you.
Turn it on by setting tmux: true
in terminalle.yaml
(see configuration).
The following shortcuts are enabled in tmux mode:
tmux default | tmux mode | Command |
---|---|---|
<Prefix> ! |
Ctrl+! |
break-pane |
<Prefix> " |
Ctrl+" |
split-window |
<Prefix> # |
Ctrl+# |
list-buffers |
<Prefix> $ |
Ctrl+$ |
command-prompt -I "#S" "rename-session -- '%%'" |
<Prefix> % |
Ctrl+% |
split-window -h |
<Prefix> & |
Ctrl+& |
confirm-before -p "kill-window #W? (y/n)" kill-window |
<Prefix> ' |
Ctrl+' |
command-prompt -T window-target -p "index" "select-window -t ':%%'" |
<Prefix> ( |
Ctrl+( |
switch-client -p |
<Prefix> ) |
Ctrl+) |
switch-client -n |
<Prefix> , |
Ctrl+, |
command-prompt -I "#W" "rename-window -- '%%'" |
<Prefix> : |
Ctrl+: |
command-prompt |
<Prefix> ; |
Ctrl+; |
last-pane |
<Prefix> = |
Ctrl+= |
choose-buffer -Z |
<Prefix> [ |
Ctrl+[ |
copy-mode |
<Prefix> ] |
Ctrl+] |
paste-buffer |
<Prefix> { |
Ctrl+{ |
swap-pane -U |
<Prefix> } |
Ctrl+} |
swap-pane -D |
To reap maximum benefits, add the following to your .tmux.conf
,
taking care of other common tmux shortcuts that do not get mangled by typical terminal emulators:
# Generally shorten `<Prefix> <X>` to `Ctrl+<X>` for various `<X>`.
# Note that some commands (e.g. `<Prefix> c` for `new-window`) would conflict with
# established control sequences (`Ctrl+c` should send `SIGINT`) if shortened.
bind -n C-f command-prompt "find-window -Z -- '%%'"
bind -n C-n next-window
bind -n C-o select-pane -t ":.+"
bind -n C-p previous-window
bind -n C-q display-panes
bind -n C-s choose-tree -Zs
bind -n C-t clock-mode
bind -n C-x confirm-before -p "kill-pane #P? (y/n)" kill-pane
bind -n C-Space next-layout
# Resize panes using arrow keys and either `Ctrl` or `Meta`.
bind -n C-Up resize-pane -U
bind -n M-Up resize-pane -U 5
bind -n C-Down resize-pane -D
bind -n M-Down resize-pane -D 5
bind -n C-Left resize-pane -L
bind -n M-Left resize-pane -L 5
bind -n C-Right resize-pane -R
bind -n M-Right resize-pane -R 5
This all goes especially well with vim-tmux-navigator, which provides shortened bindings for switching seemlessly between tmux panes and Vim windows.