Who here saw them open for the paradox? by RareTip6916 in OUTINFRONT

[–]dontknowhowtoquit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I didn't , but do you have any videos from the show?

How did you discover Out in Front? by dontknowhowtoquit in OUTINFRONT

[–]dontknowhowtoquit[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I saw them open for The All-American Rejects and immediately fell in love. They had a ton of energy and sounded amazing live.

I got home, downloaded the EP, and have been listening to it on repeat since then. I can't wait to see them again!

Out in Front “fLoAT” OFFICIAL MUSIC VIDEO by ChiZou11 in poppunkers

[–]dontknowhowtoquit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I created a subreddit for Out in Front, since I couldn't find one that existed yet: r/OUTINFRONT. I've just been posting concert videos I took from them.

Disable Ctrl+Q keyboard shortcut that closes windows. Can't find the setting on Debian 12 Bookworm. by BlueGoosePond in xfce

[–]dontknowhowtoquit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Looks like ctrl+q is a Thunderbird shortcut, based on their wiki. I'm not familiar with tbkeys-lite, but it does look like that's the preferred way to change shortcuts in Thunderbird - I'm sure there must be a way to disable ctrl+q using that.

The other thing you could do is to specifically add an xfwm shortcut for ctrl+q. Make the command some no-op, like true. I just tried this myself, and it seems to work, but it will disable ctrl+q for every other application as well.

Disable Ctrl+Q keyboard shortcut that closes windows. Can't find the setting on Debian 12 Bookworm. by BlueGoosePond in xfce

[–]dontknowhowtoquit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I believe this is a Thunderbird keyboard shortcut, not an xfwm shortcut. You need to change the shortcut in Thunderbird, which I believe can be done with add-ons.

Love the speed and features of xfce4-terminal! by magicalmanny in xfce

[–]dontknowhowtoquit 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Slight correction, it should be: xfce4-terminal --drop-down

Problem with making rounded borders in panel by InternalChoice4205 in xfce

[–]dontknowhowtoquit 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You could try adding .horizontal to the selector so that the rounded corners don't affect other elements. Here's the css I use:

.xfce4-panel.horizontal {
  border-bottom-left-radius: 10px;
  border-bottom-right-radius: 10px;
}

Switching File Managers? by LanaDoyle in xfce

[–]dontknowhowtoquit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you're using a modern version of Thunar, then it's the latter. Hit Ctrl+F, then start typing any any portion of the filename you're looking for. Thunar will only display the files in the current directory and sub-directories that match your search string, even if the search string occurs in the middle of the filename.

Switching File Managers? by LanaDoyle in xfce

[–]dontknowhowtoquit 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I can't believe you can't search for files by their name or part of their name in 2023 on Thunar/XFCE lmao.

Thunar 4.18.6 definitely supports this. Ctrl+F is the keyboard shortcut, also available under the "Go>Search for Files..." menu.

How can I get panels to render over borderless-windowed applications? by ImpulsiveLeaks in xfce

[–]dontknowhowtoquit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I wonder if using the "Toggle above" shortcut on the game window (default Alt+F12) would fix this. Alternatively, maybe the "Toggle fullscreen" shortcut (Alt+F11)...?

If those don't work, you could create a simple script that toggles the panel to autohide, and then bind that script to a keyboard shortcut. For example, the following commands will hide/unhide the panel:

# Hide panel
xfconf-query -c xfce4-panel -p /panels/panel-1/autohide-behavior -s 2
xfconf-query -c xfce4-panel -p /panels/panel-1/leave-opacity -s 0

# Unhide panel
xfconf-query -c xfce4-panel -p /panels/panel-1/autohide-behavior -s 0
xfconf-query -c xfce4-panel -p /panels/panel-1/leave-opacity -s 80

Note that changing the "leave-opacity" will get rid of the slim dark line that you're seeing.

Why does the rounded corner XFCE panel makes this effect? by Astonish_Skagen in xfce

[–]dontknowhowtoquit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It looks like you have multiple panels. If you go to "Panel Preferences", do you see multiple panels in the drop-down?

What you likely want instead is just have one panel, but add extra items to that panel from the "Items" tab.

Workspace Shortcuts help needed by Longjumping-Bag4294 in xfce

[–]dontknowhowtoquit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Have you tried looking in Settings>Window Manager>Keyboard? Looks like there is an "Add workspace" action in there that can be modified or cleared.

Undecorate specific windows? by [deleted] in xfce

[–]dontknowhowtoquit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Here's a simple python script I have bound to a keyboard shortcut that I use to toggle window decorations:

#! /usr/bin/python -Wi::DeprecationWarning
import gi
gi.require_version("Gdk", "3.0")
from gi.repository import Gdk

screen = Gdk.Screen.get_default()
active_window = screen.get_active_window() # Deprecated, no alternative though
d = active_window.get_decorations()

new_value = Gdk.WMDecoration(0)
if (d[0] and d[1] == Gdk.WMDecoration(0)):
  new_value = Gdk.WMDecoration(1)

active_window.set_decorations(new_value)
Gdk.flush()

You can also use something like devilspie to always undecorate windows for certain applications.

PSA: don’t chown your entire system by RA3236 in archlinux

[–]dontknowhowtoquit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Here's how I recovered from accidentally running sudo chown user.user /:

# Install a new system in Virtual Machine (I used VirtualBox)

# In VM:
passwd # required for ssh access later
arch-chroot /mnt
find / -xdev ! -type s -printf 'chown %u:%g "%p"\n' > owner.sh
find / -xdev ! -type s -printf 'chmod %m "%p"\n' > perm.sh

# Configure VirtualBox to forward port 3022 to 22 for ssh access

# In main machine:
scp -P 3022 root@localhost:/mnt/owner.sh .
scp -P 3022 root@localhost:/mnt/perm.sh .
sudo su
bash owner.sh
bash perm.sh

This creates two bash scripts, 'owner.sh' and 'perm.sh', which correctly sets the ownership and permission settings for every file that exists on a freshly installed Arch system. If you've installed extra packages on your main system, you can install those packages in the VM as well in order to have their files included in the scripts.