Arch is just a distro. What DE or Window manager are you on, Wayland or still XOrg?
rofi and wofi are a good example how this question makes no sense.
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Arch is just a distro. What DE or Window manager are you on, Wayland or still XOrg?
rofi and wofi are a good example how this question makes no sense.
You're right I sbould have included that in the question. I'm on Hyprland with Wayland so there are quite a few choices. I mentioned rofi (rofi-wayland) and wofi because I can see that they are both options here.
Fuzzel works great for me on Hyprland.
I use a Wayland version of rofi when I use hyprland though wofi probably works fine too (which I believe is default as per the config).
True, rofi works on Wayland now
I just use whatever is included with the desktop environment. On KDE and GNOME launching an application involves pressing the Super ("Windows") key, typing the first couple of letters of the application I want to launch and pressing the return key.
I might be missing something here but I don't know how other launchers could possibly make this a simpler process.
I might be missing something here but I don’t know how other launchers could possibly make this a simpler process.
Shortcuts to launch an app directly in example. So my keyboard becomes my launcher.
I use bunch of different tools, including KRunner (on KDE) and previously Rofi. These type name and search tools for launching an app have the problem that you need to remember what name the tool was. For programs I use often this is not an issue, but not all applications have names good to remember and not all of them are used often. The associated description helps, but sometimes I don't know what words to type.
Therefore I "need" the app menu with categories and favorites, to navigate with the mouse through. And the most used applications are usually assigned to a shortcut and my panel on the top. In short I use mostly all of these techniques as an application launcher (in that order):
Edit: Forgot to mention that some of the launchers I use are custom made scripts for the terminal.
Krunner in KDE Plasma. Fast, customisable and reliable.
I also use krunner but unless I've misconfigured it, I wouldn't call it fast (and it freezes a lot since it runs in the background).
Compared to when I used rofi on hyprland (which was really fast). I'm back on KDE cause of the hyprland toxicity debacle, and honesty the only thing that isn't fast, customizable, and reliable is the app runner.
Krunner also has a weird quirk where as it loads entries, it will change the currently selected option so when you hit Enter, it will actually not execute the one you want, but instead run "Install "
Talking out loud I should probably bind alt+space to back to rofi or try Fuzzel or something
try disabling any krunner plugins you don't need. that should make things faster.
If you’re on Wayland, fuzzel just keeps getting better each release.
Yep I 100% recommend Fuzzel too !
I’ve been looking for something for Wayland, I’ll give this a go, thank you.
Launch your apps from terminal like a real Arch gangsta
I use dmenu_run because it's ridiculously minimal, has zero dependencies, is very fast, and fits with the i3 aesthetic well.
I ended up coding my own.
Lots of stuff I'd want in an applications launcher on hyperland. I'd need it to have all the functions of the important system indicators and essentially take the role of the top panel in gnome.
that's an extreme and impressive solution
I use rofi as my app launcher and more. I've share my old script here.
I have now extended this script to support the following:
bemenu. Type stuff in popup, press enter, no confettis thrown on your face.
I like fuzzel, had a few issues with dpi scaling on wofi out of the box.
Easy to integrate clipboard/window select/dmenu binds and a way to distinguish indexed entries from straight text was a plus.
Honestly unless you're going out of the box to something new (Walker and anyrun caught my eye) dmenu has had everything I needed for years... But I don't want to set it up again. Not again.
dmenu
is iconic for a reason, although manually patching it to meet your preferences is a bit too much of a project for people who just want something to work. not wanting to learn C
is valid.
I use fzf with a popup terminal:
# example for i3
bindsym $mod+Return exec --no-startup-id kitty -T _menu_ -e bash -c 'ls $HOME/.local/bin/ | fzf | xargs -r -I{} i3-msg -t command exec $HOME/.local/bin/{}'
for_window [title="_menu_"] floating enable
for_window [title="_menu_"] resize set 600 800
I like this approach because it's simple and configurable. I prefer to see only the symlinks/scripts that I put in my local bin folder, but it can easily be extended to support .desktop files, multiple folders, filtering, etc.
I like these self made scripts. Some ideas to improve this: a) instead ls, use find command if you want use its output as input in another program (will yield fullpath too), b) fzf has a preview functionality, which I like a lot to use when it comes to directories or script files. As for the run command, I'm not sure why you use xargs and what i3-msg is needed for. Here is an alternative way.
(Edit: I always forget that beehaw will convert my ampersand to &
. Have this in mind if you read the below code.)
bash -c 'cd "${HOME}/.local/bin"; path="$(find . -maxdepth 1 -type f -executable -printf "%f\n" | fzf --preview "cat {}")" && "${path}"'
below same command in a bit more readable standalone script:
#!/usr/bin/env bash
cd "${HOME}/.local/bin" || exit 1
path="$( \
find . -maxdepth 1 -type f -executable -printf "%f\n" | \
fzf --preview "cat {}" \
)" && "${path}"
The biggest problem with fzf is, that scripts that need an argument are not covered here. One could either use the input string from fzf as arguments or like that, or an optional input after fzf selection.
Ah nice! Thanks for the suggestion. Yeah --preview
is a great feature that is good to remember.
And true, it's better to use find -executable
than ls. Although in my case I would use -type f -o -type l
since I want to include symlinks (often I will cd into my local bin folder and ln -s $(which )
to add it to my launcher). I'm using ls since I only put executables in there and using relative file paths so that it's nicer to look at. But cd or sed would work as well
Yeah the xargs + i3-msg part is a bit clunky but I'm not sure what else to do, since the terminal window needs to close immediately, which prevents the application from running. I tried a few variations with nohup and launching in the background, but haven't found another solution. But I'm sure there's a way
I've been using ULauncher for a while and I'm quite happy with it, it has plugin support too.
Very comfortable with Rofi. It's especially nice in a window manager as it also works as a switcher or shortcut to your open programs.
@gwilikers dmenu is suckles app launcher. it's super minimalistic and can be used for choosing things with other things as well, for example pass_menu
I'm fine with Rofi. I've used xfce4-appfinder also, it's less minimal, not configurable (good graphical defaults, might be what you want).
Big fan of bash. Pretty sure it's already installed for you.
PieDock
if you come from Windows, liked the 10 start menu, and you want to use KDE, there's a pretty similar launcher you can use: https://store.kde.org/p/2142716
it does not have collapsible groups and live tiles, but otherwise it's pretty good I think
Playing along for Mint/Cinnamon suggestions. Already using the Cinimenu (or whatever it is) but its still not "it".
I like ulauncher. That's what I use on my main machine that runs Mint. It's not Mint or Cinnamon specific but it doesn't need to be
Maybe I misunderstood. Are launchers more like "search" or quick lunch?
I was looking for a start menu replacement.
Krunner is great.