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Manage i3wm workspaces in groups you control

Project description

i3 Workspace Groups

A Python library and set of command line tools for managing i3wm workspaces in groups that you define. I find this tool useful for managing many workspaces in i3.

Demo flow

Table of Contents

Background

I often find myself working with many i3 workspaces at once (7-8+), usually related to multiple projects/contexts (personal/work etc). This has caused me a few issues, for example:

  • Working with a set of workspaces of a given project/context, without being distracted by unrelated workspaces.
  • Reusing the same workspace number in multiple projects/contexts. For example, I have two different emails for personal and work stuff, and I want Super+1 to always switch to the workspace with the email client relevant to my current context.
  • Finding a free workspace for a new window (that can also be reached with my keybindings)

This has led me to create the https://github.com/infokiller/i3-workspace-groups project, which enables you to define and manage groups of workspaces, each with their own "namespace", and switch between them.

Overview

The main operations that the CLI tool i3-workspace-groups supports are:

  • Assign the focused workspace to a group with a given name (and creating the group if it doesn't exist).
  • Switch the currently active group. Note that the active group is not necessarily the same as the focused group.
  • Navigation and movement within a group while ignoring the other groups. See examples below.

The tools provided use i3 workspace names to store and read the group for each workspace. For example, if a user assigns the workspace "mail" to the group "work", it will be renamed to "work:mail".

Example walk through

NOTE: This walk through assumes that you configured keybindings like the example i3 config.

Say we start with the following workspace names:

  1. "1" with cat videos from YouTube.
  2. "2" with a news reader.
  3. "3" with a photo editor.
  4. "4" with an email client for work.

An important thing to understand here is that every i3 workspace is always assigned to a single group. And since we haven't assigned any workspace to a group yet, all the workspaces are implicitly in the default group, which is labeled with the string "".

After a few hours of leisure time, you decide to do some work, which requires opening a few windows on a few workspaces. In order to create a new group, first you switch to the workspace "4", and then you press Super+Shift+g, which will prompt you for a new for the new group. You decide to name it "work" and press enter. You will then notice that the workspace name will change in i3bar to "work:4". Then, you press Super+g in order to switch the active group. You will be shown a list of existing groups, which will now be "work" and "". You should now see your workspaces in i3bar ordered as following: "work:4", "1", "2", "3". What happened here? When you switched to the "work" group, the first thing that the tool did was to move all the workspaces in the work group (only "work:mail") to be in the beginning of the workspace list. Then, it renamed the workspaces in the default group to include the group name, so that they can be differentiated from other workspaces in the "work" group with the same name.

Then, you decide that you want to open a new terminal window in a new workspace. So you press Super+2, which will move you to a new workspace named "work:2". Note that although there is already a workspace with the name "2" in the default group (now shown as "2" in the workspace list), using Super+2 actually takes you to a new empty workspace in the group "work".

After some time working, you become lazy and you want to get back to cat videos, but you promise yourself to get back to work in a few hours, and you don't want to lose your open winows. So you press Super+g to switch the active work back to the default one. You should now see your workspaces in i3bar ordered as following: "1", "2", "3", "work:4". The focus will also shift to the first workspace in the default group ("1" in this case). Now that you're back in the default group, pressing Super+2 will again lead you to the workspace "2" in the default group.

i3 config

In order to use these tools effectively, commands need to be bound to keybindings. For example, my i3 config contains the following exerts:

set $mod Mod4

strip_workspace_numbers yes

set $exec_i3_groups exec --no-startup-id i3-workspace-groups

# Switch active workspace group
bindsym $mod+g exec --no-startup-id i3-switch-active-workspace-group
# Move workspace to another group
bindsym $mod+Shift+g exec --no-startup-id i3-assign-workspace-to-group

bindsym $mod+1 $exec_i3_groups workspace-number 1
bindsym $mod+2 $exec_i3_groups workspace-number 2
bindsym $mod+3 $exec_i3_groups workspace-number 3
bindsym $mod+4 $exec_i3_groups workspace-number 4
bindsym $mod+5 $exec_i3_groups workspace-number 5
bindsym $mod+6 $exec_i3_groups workspace-number 6
bindsym $mod+7 $exec_i3_groups workspace-number 7
bindsym $mod+8 $exec_i3_groups workspace-number 8
bindsym $mod+9 $exec_i3_groups workspace-number 9
bindsym $mod+0 $exec_i3_groups workspace-number 10

bindsym $mod+Shift+1 $exec_i3_groups move-to-number 1
bindsym $mod+Shift+2 $exec_i3_groups move-to-number 2
bindsym $mod+Shift+3 $exec_i3_groups move-to-number 3
bindsym $mod+Shift+4 $exec_i3_groups move-to-number 4
bindsym $mod+Shift+5 $exec_i3_groups move-to-number 5
bindsym $mod+Shift+6 $exec_i3_groups move-to-number 6
bindsym $mod+Shift+7 $exec_i3_groups move-to-number 7
bindsym $mod+Shift+8 $exec_i3_groups move-to-number 8
bindsym $mod+Shift+9 $exec_i3_groups move-to-number 9
bindsym $mod+Shift+0 $exec_i3_groups move-to-number 10

# Switch to previous workspace in group.
bindsym $mod+p $exec_i3_groups workspace-prev
# Switch to next workspace in group.
bindsym $mod+n $exec_i3_groups workspace-next

# Move to previous workspace in group.
bindsym $mod+Shift+p $exec_i3_groups move-to-prev
# Move to next workspace in group.
bindsym $mod+Shift+n $exec_i3_groups move-to-next

I also recommend keeping keybindings for the i3 built in workspace navigation commands, for example:

bindsym $mod+Control+1 workspace number 1
bindsym $mod+Control+2 workspace number 2
bindsym $mod+Control+3 workspace number 3
bindsym $mod+Control+4 workspace number 4
bindsym $mod+Control+5 workspace number 5
bindsym $mod+Control+6 workspace number 6
bindsym $mod+Control+7 workspace number 7
bindsym $mod+Control+8 workspace number 8
bindsym $mod+Control+9 workspace number 9
bindsym $mod+Control+0 workspace number 10

Limitations

  • Workspace names are used for storing the group, so if another tool changes a workspace name without preserving the format that this project uses, the tool can make a mistake about the group assignment.
  • Every group can have up to a 100 workspaces by default.

Concepts

Active workspace

The active workspace is the workspace with the lowest number in i3. Typically, before you use the provided scripts to manage you workspaces, this will be the one that appears first in the workspace list in i3bar (by default the leftmost one).

NOTE: In a multi-monitor setup, there is an active workspace per monitor. NOTE: The primary workspace is not affected by whether its focused or not.

Active group

The active group is the group of the active workspace. This group will normally contain workspaces related to the task you're doing at the time it's active. When you want to work on another task, you can switch the active group. Workspaces that are not in the active group can still be interacted with, but some commands provided are designed to make it easier to interact with the workspaces of the active group.

NOTE: In a multi-monitor setup, there is an active group per monitor (which can be the same, depending on the group of the active workspace in that monitor).

Focused group

The group of the focused workspace.

Default group

The group of workspaces that were not assigned to a group by the user. This group is usually displayed as "".

Installation

The scripts can be installed using pip:

pip install i3-workspace-groups

Then you should be able to run the command line tool i3-workspace-groups. There are also a few utility scripts provided that require rofi and which are useful for interactively managing the groups, using rofi as the UI. They include:

Sway compatibility note

This project depends on i3ipc for its interaction with i3, so should also work the same on sway. That said, I didn't test it yet and i3 is my main window manager.

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