Title. Basically, “if a street fighter gamer and a linux tryhard had a baby” where a combination of keys is issued to run a command/script rather than a single or a simultaneous stroke of two or more. i.e left, down, left, right arrow keys, R_CTRL to run Firefox. Right, right, Up, right arrow keys, delete to power off the PC, etc.

Don’t know if such command exists, but there you go.

Bonus points if its a standalone and supports X11, Wayland and Arcan.

  • Kurisu
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    2311 months ago

    Man I already can’t get my inputs right in games, If I ever whiff a fucking combo to start my browser I’m ending it all.

    • Rayspekt
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      711 months ago

      You need to get out of the parking garage from Driver to boot your PC from now on.

  • Rustmilian
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    11 months ago

    ↑↑↓↓←→←→ + a + b + Enter = sudo rm -rf /* --no-preserve-root

  • RandoCalrandian
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    1811 months ago

    You mean a key combination like OS, f,i,r,e,f,down,down,enter to launch Firefox?

    That exists, bud. There are even multiple ways to achieve the same command, like “OS,t,e,r,m,i,n,a,l,down,enter, ‘open Firefox’”

    • @Eheran
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      -511 months ago

      Hahaha, thank you. In windows that would be even more efficient, since a few letters will be enough to identify something unique. Win, f, i, enter

      • RandoCalrandian
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        811 months ago

        The same is true in Linux, but it’s harder to get the joke with “OS,f,i,enter”

      • @sir_reginald
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        611 months ago

        Win, f, i, enter

        It’s literally the same with most Linux’s DEs. And even in Window Managers when using dmenu or rofi.

        • @Eheran
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          -211 months ago

          Good. Why did he then fell the need for absurd key combos?

  • lurch (he/him)
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    11 months ago

    hyprland has this, but you have to configure it. It’s called Submaps. Some other tiling window managers/compositors (notion for example) have it too, but not to that extent. (notion can be enhanced by Lua scripting, tho.)

    The idea is, after the first key of the sequence the meaning of a set of keys change. You could configure those to change the meanings again etc until you finally reach whatever depth you wanted and it performs an action.

    However, be warned that hyprland is currently developed by very elitist people who like to support onky a very small set of distributions (primarily Arch btw) and have not much interest in other peoples Ubuntu shenanigens and the likes. It is extremely hard to install in Ubuntu and similar, requiring you to do minor edits to build scripts and source code in multiple languages and finding required library versions from build errors that do not mention them.

    • @mvirts
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      111 months ago

      Alt f2 xterm sudo poweroff password

      Ctrl Alt f2 sudo poweroff password

      SysRq o

  • Scraft161
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    311 months ago

    sxhkd/swhkd, both support creating these natively and the second one works not just on Wayland, but also X11 and the TTY.

  • callyral [he/they]
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    11 months ago

    Key chords/submodes? Not a desktop app, but an Emacs extension, Hydra. There’s also a Neovim version.

    I don’t know of a desktop app, personally I like to keep my desktop keybinds simple, so I wouldn’t really need that.


    There are two kinds of people:

    Image transcription:

    User @[email protected] · 4 days ago

    So, basically vim? /s

    User @[email protected] · 4 days ago

    So… emacs?

  • @[email protected]
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    211 months ago

    I think you can already do this in one shortcuts, not sure of any standalone program that does, if definably accidentally bond like Ctrl+d, Ctrl+s to screenshot before