From dc93f1c1fd7b67e2da5af2ffada732b9ddeb2d6a Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Kent Daleng Date: Sun, 17 Aug 2025 16:05:41 +0200 Subject: github wiki replacement / mkdocs-docs (#2147) * Add wiki based on mkdocs * wording fixes * fix github bg color on narrow * Fix left sidebar section headers being bigger than pages * fix hover accent * fix list rendering on fractional layout * fix videos * fix automatic full links * remove redundant commented css * improve dark mode contrast * update pygments for better child node coloring * update logo * remove blank lines * add systemd language hint --------- Co-authored-by: Ivan Molodetskikh --- wiki/Configuration:-Key-Bindings.md | 375 ------------------------------------ 1 file changed, 375 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 wiki/Configuration:-Key-Bindings.md (limited to 'wiki/Configuration:-Key-Bindings.md') diff --git a/wiki/Configuration:-Key-Bindings.md b/wiki/Configuration:-Key-Bindings.md deleted file mode 100644 index 3295b0d7..00000000 --- a/wiki/Configuration:-Key-Bindings.md +++ /dev/null @@ -1,375 +0,0 @@ -### Overview - -Key bindings are declared in the `binds {}` section of the config. - -> [!NOTE] -> This is one of the few sections that *does not* get automatically filled with defaults if you omit it, so make sure to copy it from the default config. - -Each bind is a hotkey followed by one action enclosed in curly brackets. -For example: - -```kdl -binds { - Mod+Left { focus-column-left; } - Super+Alt+L { spawn "swaylock"; } -} -``` - -The hotkey consists of modifiers separated by `+` signs, followed by an XKB key name in the end. - -Valid modifiers are: - -- `Ctrl` or `Control`; -- `Shift`; -- `Alt`; -- `Super` or `Win`; -- `ISO_Level3_Shift` or `Mod5`—this is the AltGr key on certain layouts; -- `ISO_Level5_Shift`: can be used with an xkb lv5 option like `lv5:caps_switch`; -- `Mod`. - -`Mod` is a special modifier that is equal to `Super` when running niri on a TTY, and to `Alt` when running niri as a nested winit window. -This way, you can test niri in a window without causing too many conflicts with the host compositor's key bindings. -For this reason, most of the default keys use the `Mod` modifier. - -Since: 25.05 You can customize the `Mod` key [in the `input` section of the config](./Configuration:-Input.md#mod-key-mod-key-nested). - -> [!TIP] -> To find an XKB name for a particular key, you may use a program like [`wev`](https://git.sr.ht/~sircmpwn/wev). -> -> Open it from a terminal and press the key that you want to detect. -> In the terminal, you will see output like this: -> -> ``` -> [14: wl_keyboard] key: serial: 757775; time: 44940343; key: 113; state: 1 (pressed) -> sym: Left (65361), utf8: '' -> [14: wl_keyboard] key: serial: 757776; time: 44940432; key: 113; state: 0 (released) -> sym: Left (65361), utf8: '' -> [14: wl_keyboard] key: serial: 757777; time: 44940753; key: 114; state: 1 (pressed) -> sym: Right (65363), utf8: '' -> [14: wl_keyboard] key: serial: 757778; time: 44940846; key: 114; state: 0 (released) -> sym: Right (65363), utf8: '' -> ``` -> -> Here, look at `sym: Left` and `sym: Right`: these are the key names. -> I was pressing the left and the right arrow in this example. -> -> Keep in mind that binding shifted keys requires spelling out Shift and the unshifted version of the key, according to your XKB layout. -> For example, on the US QWERTY layout, < is on Shift + ,, so to bind it, you spell out something like `Mod+Shift+Comma`. -> -> As another example, if you've configured the French [BÉPO](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B%C3%89PO) XKB layout, your < is on AltGr + «. -> AltGr is `ISO_Level3_Shift`, or equivalently `Mod5`, so to bind it, you spell out something like `Mod+Mod5+guillemotleft`. -> -> When resolving latin keys, niri will search for the *first* configured XKB layout that has the latin key. -> So for example with US QWERTY and RU layouts configured, US QWERTY will be used for latin binds. - -Since: 0.1.8 Binds will repeat by default (i.e. holding down a bind will make it trigger repeatedly). -You can disable that for specific binds with `repeat=false`: - -```kdl -binds { - Mod+T repeat=false { spawn "alacritty"; } -} -``` - -Binds can also have a cooldown, which will rate-limit the bind and prevent it from repeatedly triggering too quickly. - -```kdl -binds { - Mod+T cooldown-ms=500 { spawn "alacritty"; } -} -``` - -This is mostly useful for the scroll bindings. - -### Scroll Bindings - -You can bind mouse wheel scroll ticks using the following syntax. -These binds will change direction based on the `natural-scroll` setting. - -```kdl -binds { - Mod+WheelScrollDown cooldown-ms=150 { focus-workspace-down; } - Mod+WheelScrollUp cooldown-ms=150 { focus-workspace-up; } - Mod+WheelScrollRight { focus-column-right; } - Mod+WheelScrollLeft { focus-column-left; } -} -``` - -Similarly, you can bind touchpad scroll "ticks". -Touchpad scrolling is continuous, so for these binds it is split into discrete intervals based on distance travelled. - -These binds are also affected by touchpad's `natural-scroll`, so these example binds are "inverted", since niri has `natural-scroll` enabled for touchpads by default. - -```kdl -binds { - Mod+TouchpadScrollDown { spawn "wpctl" "set-volume" "@DEFAULT_AUDIO_SINK@" "0.02+"; } - Mod+TouchpadScrollUp { spawn "wpctl" "set-volume" "@DEFAULT_AUDIO_SINK@" "0.02-"; } -} -``` - -Both mouse wheel and touchpad scroll binds will prevent applications from receiving any scroll events when their modifiers are held down. -For example, if you have a `Mod+WheelScrollDown` bind, then while holding `Mod`, all mouse wheel scrolling will be consumed by niri. - -### Mouse Click Bindings - -Since: 25.01 - -You can bind mouse clicks using the following syntax. - -```kdl -binds { - Mod+MouseLeft { close-window; } - Mod+MouseRight { close-window; } - Mod+MouseMiddle { close-window; } - Mod+MouseForward { close-window; } - Mod+MouseBack { close-window; } -} -``` - -Mouse clicks operate on the window that was focused at the time of the click, not the window you're clicking. - -Note that binding `Mod+MouseLeft` or `Mod+MouseRight` will override the corresponding gesture (moving or resizing the window). - -### Custom Hotkey Overlay Titles - -Since: 25.02 - -The hotkey overlay (the Important Hotkeys dialog) shows a hardcoded list of binds. -You can customize this list using the `hotkey-overlay-title` property. - -To add a bind to the hotkey overlay, set the property to the title that you want to show: -```kdl -binds { - Mod+Shift+S hotkey-overlay-title="Toggle Dark/Light Style" { spawn "some-script.sh"; } -} -``` - -Binds with custom titles are listed after the hardcoded binds and before non-customized Spawn binds. - -To remove a hardcoded bind from the hotkey overlay, set the property to null: -```kdl -binds { - Mod+Q hotkey-overlay-title=null { close-window; } -} -``` - -> [!TIP] -> When multiple key combinations are bound to the same action: -> - If any of the binds has a custom hotkey overlay title, niri will show that bind. -> - Otherwise, if any of the binds has a null title, niri will hide the bind. -> - Otherwise, niri will show the first key combination. - -Custom titles support [Pango markup](https://docs.gtk.org/Pango/pango_markup.html): - -```kdl -binds { - Mod+Shift+S hotkey-overlay-title="Toggle Dark/Light Style" { spawn "some-script.sh"; } -} -``` - -![Custom markup example.](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/2a2ba914-bfa7-4dfa-bb5e-49839034765d) - -### Actions - -Every action that you can bind is also available for programmatic invocation via `niri msg action`. -Run `niri msg action` to get a full list of actions along with their short descriptions. - -Here are a few actions that benefit from more explanation. - -#### `spawn` - -Run a program. - -`spawn` accepts a path to the program binary as the first argument, followed by arguments to the program. -For example: - -```kdl -binds { - // Run alacritty. - Mod+T { spawn "alacritty"; } - - // Run `wpctl set-volume @DEFAULT_AUDIO_SINK@ 0.1+`. - XF86AudioRaiseVolume { spawn "wpctl" "set-volume" "@DEFAULT_AUDIO_SINK@" "0.1+"; } -} -``` - -> [!TIP] -> -> Since: 0.1.5 -> -> Spawn bindings have a special `allow-when-locked=true` property that makes them work even while the session is locked: -> -> ```kdl -> binds { -> // This mute bind will work even when the session is locked. -> XF86AudioMute allow-when-locked=true { spawn "wpctl" "set-mute" "@DEFAULT_AUDIO_SINK@" "toggle"; } -> } -> ``` - -Currently, niri *does not* use a shell to run commands, which means that you need to manually separate arguments. - -```kdl -binds { - // Correct: every argument is in its own quotes. - Mod+T { spawn "alacritty" "-e" "/usr/bin/fish"; } - - // Wrong: will interpret the whole `alacritty -e /usr/bin/fish` string as the binary path. - Mod+D { spawn "alacritty -e /usr/bin/fish"; } - - // Wrong: will pass `-e /usr/bin/fish` as one argument, which alacritty won't understand. - Mod+Q { spawn "alacritty" "-e /usr/bin/fish"; } -} -``` - -This also means that you cannot expand environment variables or `~`. -If you need this, you can run the command through a shell manually. - -```kdl -binds { - // Wrong: no shell expansion here. These strings will be passed literally to the program. - Mod+T { spawn "grim" "-o" "$MAIN_OUTPUT" "~/screenshot.png"; } - - // Correct: run this through a shell manually so that it can expand the arguments. - // Note that the entire command is passed as a SINGLE argument, - // because shell will do its own argument splitting by whitespace. - Mod+D { spawn "sh" "-c" "grim -o $MAIN_OUTPUT ~/screenshot.png"; } - - // You can also use a shell to run multiple commands, - // use pipes, process substitution, and so on. - Mod+Q { spawn "sh" "-c" "notify-send clipboard \"$(wl-paste)\""; } -} -``` - -As a special case, niri will expand `~` to the home directory *only* at the beginning of the program name. - -```kdl -binds { - // This will work: one ~ at the very beginning. - Mod+T { spawn "~/scripts/do-something.sh"; } -} -``` - -#### `quit` - -Exit niri after showing a confirmation dialog to avoid accidentally triggering it. - -```kdl -binds { - Mod+Shift+E { quit; } -} -``` - -If you want to skip the confirmation dialog, set the flag like so: - -```kdl -binds { - Mod+Shift+E { quit skip-confirmation=true; } -} -``` - -#### `do-screen-transition` - -Since: 0.1.6 - -Freeze the screen for a brief moment then crossfade to the new contents. - -```kdl -binds { - Mod+Return { do-screen-transition; } -} -``` - -This action is mainly useful to trigger from scripts changing the system theme or style (between light and dark for example). -It makes transitions like this, where windows change their style one by one, look smooth and synchronized. - -For example, using the GNOME color scheme setting: - -```shell -niri msg action do-screen-transition -dconf write /org/gnome/desktop/interface/color-scheme "\"prefer-dark\"" -``` - -By default, the screen is frozen for 250 ms to give windows time to redraw, before the crossfade. -You can set this delay like this: - -```kdl -binds { - Mod+Return { do-screen-transition delay-ms=100; } -} -``` - -Or, in scripts: - -```shell -niri msg action do-screen-transition --delay-ms 100 -``` - -#### `toggle-window-rule-opacity` - -Since: 25.02 - -Toggle the opacity window rule of the focused window. -This only has an effect if the window's opacity window rule is already set to semitransparent. - -```kdl -binds { - Mod+O { toggle-window-rule-opacity; } -} -``` - -#### `screenshot`, `screenshot-screen`, `screenshot-window` - -Actions for taking screenshots. - -- `screenshot`: opens the built-in interactive screenshot UI. -- `screenshot-screen`, `screenshow-window`: takes a screenshot of the focused screen or window respectively. - -The screenshot is both stored to the clipboard and saved to disk, according to the [`screenshot-path` option](./Configuration:-Miscellaneous.md#screenshot-path). - -Since: 25.02 You can disable saving to disk for a specific bind with the `write-to-disk=false` property: - -```kdl -binds { - Ctrl+Print { screenshot-screen write-to-disk=false; } - Alt+Print { screenshot-window write-to-disk=false; } -} -``` - -In the interactive screenshot UI, pressing CtrlC will copy the screenshot to the clipboard without writing it to disk. - -Since: 25.05 You can hide the mouse pointer in screenshots with the `show-pointer=false` property: - -```kdl -binds { - // The pointer will be hidden by default - // (you can still show it by pressing P). - Print { screenshot show-pointer=false; } - - // The pointer will be hidden on the screenshot. - Ctrl+Print { screenshot-screen show-pointer=false; } -} -``` - -#### `toggle-keyboard-shortcuts-inhibit` - -Since: 25.02 - -Applications such as remote-desktop clients and software KVM switches may request that niri stops processing its keyboard shortcuts so that they may, for example, forward the key presses as-is to a remote machine. -`toggle-keyboard-shortcuts-inhibit` is an escape hatch that toggles the inhibitor. -It's a good idea to bind it, so a buggy application can't hold your session hostage. - -```kdl -binds { - Mod+Escape { toggle-keyboard-shortcuts-inhibit; } -} -``` - -You can also make certain binds ignore inhibiting with the `allow-inhibiting=false` property. -They will always be handled by niri and never passed to the window. - -```kdl -binds { - // This bind will always work, even when using a virtual machine. - Super+Alt+L allow-inhibiting=false { spawn "swaylock"; } -} -``` -- cgit