# This file has been auto-generated by i3-config-wizard(1). # It will not be overwritten, so edit it as you like. # # Should you change your keyboard layout some time, delete # this file and re-run i3-config-wizard(1). # # i3 config file (v4) # # Please see https://i3wm.org/docs/userguide.html for a complete reference! set $mod Mod4 exec xrandr --output DP-1 --primary --mode 1920x1080 --pos 1920x0 --rotate normal --output DP-2 --mode 1920x1080 --pos 3840x0 --rotate normal --output HDMI-1 --mode 1920x1080 --pos 0x0 --rotate normal # Font for window titles. Will also be used by the bar unless a different font # is used in the bar {} block below. font pango:monospace 8 # This font is widely installed, provides lots of unicode glyphs, right-to-left # text rendering and scalability on retina/hidpi displays (thanks to pango). #font pango:DejaVu Sans Mono 8 # Start XDG autostart .desktop files using dex. See also # https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/XDG_Autostart exec --no-startup-id dex --autostart --environment i3 # The combination of xss-lock, nm-applet and pactl is a popular choice, so # they are included here as an example. Modify as you see fit. # xss-lock grabs a logind suspend inhibit lock and will use i3lock to lock the # screen before suspend. Use loginctl lock-session to lock your screen. exec --no-startup-id xss-lock --transfer-sleep-lock -- i3lock --nofork # NetworkManager is the most popular way to manage wireless networks on Linux, # and nm-applet is a desktop environment-independent system tray GUI for it. exec --no-startup-id nm-applet # Use pactl to adjust volume in PulseAudio. set $refresh_i3status killall -SIGUSR1 i3status bindsym XF86AudioRaiseVolume exec --no-startup-id pactl set-sink-volume @DEFAULT_SINK@ +10% && $refresh_i3status bindsym XF86AudioLowerVolume exec --no-startup-id pactl set-sink-volume @DEFAULT_SINK@ -10% && $refresh_i3status bindsym XF86AudioMute exec --no-startup-id pactl set-sink-mute @DEFAULT_SINK@ toggle && $refresh_i3status bindsym XF86AudioMicMute exec --no-startup-id pactl set-source-mute @DEFAULT_SOURCE@ toggle && $refresh_i3status # Use Mouse+$mod to drag floating windows to their wanted position floating_modifier $mod # move tiling windows via drag & drop by left-clicking into the title bar, # or left-clicking anywhere into the window while holding the floating modifier. tiling_drag modifier titlebar # start a terminal bindsym $mod+Return exec kitty bindsym $mod+f exec firefox # kill focused window bindsym $mod+BackSpace kill # start dmenu (a program launcher) bindsym $mod+d exec --no-startup-id dmenu_run # A more modern dmenu replacement is rofi: # bindcode $mod+40 exec "rofi -modi drun,run -show drun" # There also is i3-dmenu-desktop which only displays applications shipping a # .desktop file. It is a wrapper around dmenu, so you need that installed. # bindcode $mod+40 exec --no-startup-id i3-dmenu-desktop # change focus bindsym $mod+h focus left bindsym $mod+j focus down bindsym $mod+k focus up bindsym $mod+l focus right # move focused window bindsym $mod+Shift+h move left bindsym $mod+Shift+j move down bindsym $mod+Shift+k move up bindsym $mod+Shift+l move right # enter fullscreen mode for the focused container bindsym $mod+b fullscreen toggle # toggle tiling / floating bindsym $mod+Shift+space floating toggle # change focus between tiling / floating windows bindsym $mod+space focus mode_toggle # focus the parent container bindsym $mod+a focus parent # focus the child container #bindsym $mod+d focus child # Assign workspaces to specific monitors workspace 1 output DP-1 workspace 2 output HDMI-A-1 workspace 3 output DP-2 # Define names for default workspaces for which we configure key bindings later on. # We use variables to avoid repeating the names in multiple places. set $ws1 "1" set $ws2 "2" set $ws3 "3" set $ws4 "4" set $ws5 "5" set $ws6 "6" set $ws7 "7" set $ws8 "8" set $ws9 "9" set $ws10 "10" # switch to workspace bindsym $mod+q workspace number $ws1 bindsym $mod+w workspace number $ws2 bindsym $mod+e workspace number $ws3 bindsym $mod+r workspace number $ws4 bindsym $mod+t workspace number $ws5 bindsym $mod+y workspace number $ws6 bindsym $mod+u workspace number $ws7 bindsym $mod+i workspace number $ws8 bindsym $mod+o workspace number $ws9 bindsym $mod+p workspace number $ws10 # move focused container to workspace bindsym $mod+Shift+q move container to workspace number $ws1 bindsym $mod+Shift+w move container to workspace number $ws2 bindsym $mod+Shift+e move container to workspace number $ws3 bindsym $mod+Shift+r move container to workspace number $ws4 bindsym $mod+Shift+t move container to workspace number $ws5 bindsym $mod+Shift+y move container to workspace number $ws6 bindsym $mod+Shift+u move container to workspace number $ws7 bindsym $mod+Shift+i move container to workspace number $ws8 bindsym $mod+Shift+o move container to workspace number $ws9 bindsym $mod+Shift+p move container to workspace number $ws10 # reload the configuration file bindsym $mod+Shift+c reload # restart i3 inplace (preserves your layout/session, can be used to upgrade i3) bindsym $mod+Shift+semicolon restart # exit i3 (logs you out of your X session) bindsym $mod+Shift+a exec "i3-nagbar -t warning -m 'You pressed the exit shortcut. Do you really want to exit i3? This will end your X session.' -B 'Yes, exit i3' 'i3-msg exit'" # resize window (you can also use the mouse for that) # Start i3bar to display a workspace bar (plus the system information i3status # finds out, if available) bar { status_command i3status }