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Is there a window switcher for GNOME that shows the actual window?


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4















In Ubuntu 16.04 I installed a Compiz plugin with an alternative alt-tab switcher that had the nifty feature that until I let go of the Alt key, it hid all other windows and showed only the one I was about to switch to. This is very useful when one has a bunch of open terminals that don't look all that different as thumbnailed previews.



After upgrading to Ubuntu 18.04 this can't be used anymore (save for explicitly switching back to Unity, which I'd rather avoid for unrelated reasons).



Does anyone know of a similar switcher I could install for the GNOME desktop?










share|improve this question

























  • @pomsky I added that tag because of this comment. Maybe I misunderstood in which case please remove the tag.

    – DK Bose
    4 hours ago






  • 1





    I happen to use multiple monitors, but the question is not really specific to that. It would be the same with a single monitor and terminals placed in different positions (and/or different workspaces) on that.

    – Henning Makholm
    4 hours ago
















4















In Ubuntu 16.04 I installed a Compiz plugin with an alternative alt-tab switcher that had the nifty feature that until I let go of the Alt key, it hid all other windows and showed only the one I was about to switch to. This is very useful when one has a bunch of open terminals that don't look all that different as thumbnailed previews.



After upgrading to Ubuntu 18.04 this can't be used anymore (save for explicitly switching back to Unity, which I'd rather avoid for unrelated reasons).



Does anyone know of a similar switcher I could install for the GNOME desktop?










share|improve this question

























  • @pomsky I added that tag because of this comment. Maybe I misunderstood in which case please remove the tag.

    – DK Bose
    4 hours ago






  • 1





    I happen to use multiple monitors, but the question is not really specific to that. It would be the same with a single monitor and terminals placed in different positions (and/or different workspaces) on that.

    – Henning Makholm
    4 hours ago














4












4








4








In Ubuntu 16.04 I installed a Compiz plugin with an alternative alt-tab switcher that had the nifty feature that until I let go of the Alt key, it hid all other windows and showed only the one I was about to switch to. This is very useful when one has a bunch of open terminals that don't look all that different as thumbnailed previews.



After upgrading to Ubuntu 18.04 this can't be used anymore (save for explicitly switching back to Unity, which I'd rather avoid for unrelated reasons).



Does anyone know of a similar switcher I could install for the GNOME desktop?










share|improve this question
















In Ubuntu 16.04 I installed a Compiz plugin with an alternative alt-tab switcher that had the nifty feature that until I let go of the Alt key, it hid all other windows and showed only the one I was about to switch to. This is very useful when one has a bunch of open terminals that don't look all that different as thumbnailed previews.



After upgrading to Ubuntu 18.04 this can't be used anymore (save for explicitly switching back to Unity, which I'd rather avoid for unrelated reasons).



Does anyone know of a similar switcher I could install for the GNOME desktop?







18.04 gnome-shell gnome-shell-extension application-switcher






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 4 hours ago







Henning Makholm

















asked 4 hours ago









Henning MakholmHenning Makholm

1536




1536













  • @pomsky I added that tag because of this comment. Maybe I misunderstood in which case please remove the tag.

    – DK Bose
    4 hours ago






  • 1





    I happen to use multiple monitors, but the question is not really specific to that. It would be the same with a single monitor and terminals placed in different positions (and/or different workspaces) on that.

    – Henning Makholm
    4 hours ago



















  • @pomsky I added that tag because of this comment. Maybe I misunderstood in which case please remove the tag.

    – DK Bose
    4 hours ago






  • 1





    I happen to use multiple monitors, but the question is not really specific to that. It would be the same with a single monitor and terminals placed in different positions (and/or different workspaces) on that.

    – Henning Makholm
    4 hours ago

















@pomsky I added that tag because of this comment. Maybe I misunderstood in which case please remove the tag.

– DK Bose
4 hours ago





@pomsky I added that tag because of this comment. Maybe I misunderstood in which case please remove the tag.

– DK Bose
4 hours ago




1




1





I happen to use multiple monitors, but the question is not really specific to that. It would be the same with a single monitor and terminals placed in different positions (and/or different workspaces) on that.

– Henning Makholm
4 hours ago





I happen to use multiple monitors, but the question is not really specific to that. It would be the same with a single monitor and terminals placed in different positions (and/or different workspaces) on that.

– Henning Makholm
4 hours ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















4














You can use the Coverflow Alt-Tab extension for GNOME shell. It's a




Replacement of Alt-Tab, iterates through windows in a cover-flow manner.




enter image description here



Refer to this for installing and managing GNOME extensions: How do I install and manage GNOME Shell extensions?





Another alternative would be using the Alt+Esc combination. It doesn't show any overlay or provide anything fancy, it just switches to the next window and so on.






share|improve this answer


























  • Looks better than the default behavior, but doesn't quite fit what I'm hoping for. I've become accustomed to distinguishing between my various terminals by their location on the monitors -- and showing half-sized previews all moved to the middle of the screen won't really support that habit.

    – Henning Makholm
    4 hours ago











  • In this case, yo may want to look at the overview. Move your terminals to one workspace. Pressing <Super> will show them in a fixed order

    – vanadium
    4 hours ago











  • @henning Also try the <Alt><Esc> combination, it just switches to the next window and so on.

    – pomsky
    4 hours ago






  • 1





    @pomsky: Ah, sorry, I had it confused with alt-backtick. Yes, that's actually closer to what I want.

    – Henning Makholm
    3 hours ago






  • 1





    And it does do the at least slightly fancy thing of displaying an orange border on the window it's about to switch to. I'll be looking for ways to configure it to be more conspicuous, but I think I can live with that. I'll leave the question open for a day or so in case someone can point to something fancier.

    – Henning Makholm
    3 hours ago











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1 Answer
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active

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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









4














You can use the Coverflow Alt-Tab extension for GNOME shell. It's a




Replacement of Alt-Tab, iterates through windows in a cover-flow manner.




enter image description here



Refer to this for installing and managing GNOME extensions: How do I install and manage GNOME Shell extensions?





Another alternative would be using the Alt+Esc combination. It doesn't show any overlay or provide anything fancy, it just switches to the next window and so on.






share|improve this answer


























  • Looks better than the default behavior, but doesn't quite fit what I'm hoping for. I've become accustomed to distinguishing between my various terminals by their location on the monitors -- and showing half-sized previews all moved to the middle of the screen won't really support that habit.

    – Henning Makholm
    4 hours ago











  • In this case, yo may want to look at the overview. Move your terminals to one workspace. Pressing <Super> will show them in a fixed order

    – vanadium
    4 hours ago











  • @henning Also try the <Alt><Esc> combination, it just switches to the next window and so on.

    – pomsky
    4 hours ago






  • 1





    @pomsky: Ah, sorry, I had it confused with alt-backtick. Yes, that's actually closer to what I want.

    – Henning Makholm
    3 hours ago






  • 1





    And it does do the at least slightly fancy thing of displaying an orange border on the window it's about to switch to. I'll be looking for ways to configure it to be more conspicuous, but I think I can live with that. I'll leave the question open for a day or so in case someone can point to something fancier.

    – Henning Makholm
    3 hours ago
















4














You can use the Coverflow Alt-Tab extension for GNOME shell. It's a




Replacement of Alt-Tab, iterates through windows in a cover-flow manner.




enter image description here



Refer to this for installing and managing GNOME extensions: How do I install and manage GNOME Shell extensions?





Another alternative would be using the Alt+Esc combination. It doesn't show any overlay or provide anything fancy, it just switches to the next window and so on.






share|improve this answer


























  • Looks better than the default behavior, but doesn't quite fit what I'm hoping for. I've become accustomed to distinguishing between my various terminals by their location on the monitors -- and showing half-sized previews all moved to the middle of the screen won't really support that habit.

    – Henning Makholm
    4 hours ago











  • In this case, yo may want to look at the overview. Move your terminals to one workspace. Pressing <Super> will show them in a fixed order

    – vanadium
    4 hours ago











  • @henning Also try the <Alt><Esc> combination, it just switches to the next window and so on.

    – pomsky
    4 hours ago






  • 1





    @pomsky: Ah, sorry, I had it confused with alt-backtick. Yes, that's actually closer to what I want.

    – Henning Makholm
    3 hours ago






  • 1





    And it does do the at least slightly fancy thing of displaying an orange border on the window it's about to switch to. I'll be looking for ways to configure it to be more conspicuous, but I think I can live with that. I'll leave the question open for a day or so in case someone can point to something fancier.

    – Henning Makholm
    3 hours ago














4












4








4







You can use the Coverflow Alt-Tab extension for GNOME shell. It's a




Replacement of Alt-Tab, iterates through windows in a cover-flow manner.




enter image description here



Refer to this for installing and managing GNOME extensions: How do I install and manage GNOME Shell extensions?





Another alternative would be using the Alt+Esc combination. It doesn't show any overlay or provide anything fancy, it just switches to the next window and so on.






share|improve this answer















You can use the Coverflow Alt-Tab extension for GNOME shell. It's a




Replacement of Alt-Tab, iterates through windows in a cover-flow manner.




enter image description here



Refer to this for installing and managing GNOME extensions: How do I install and manage GNOME Shell extensions?





Another alternative would be using the Alt+Esc combination. It doesn't show any overlay or provide anything fancy, it just switches to the next window and so on.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 4 hours ago

























answered 4 hours ago









pomskypomsky

32k1198129




32k1198129













  • Looks better than the default behavior, but doesn't quite fit what I'm hoping for. I've become accustomed to distinguishing between my various terminals by their location on the monitors -- and showing half-sized previews all moved to the middle of the screen won't really support that habit.

    – Henning Makholm
    4 hours ago











  • In this case, yo may want to look at the overview. Move your terminals to one workspace. Pressing <Super> will show them in a fixed order

    – vanadium
    4 hours ago











  • @henning Also try the <Alt><Esc> combination, it just switches to the next window and so on.

    – pomsky
    4 hours ago






  • 1





    @pomsky: Ah, sorry, I had it confused with alt-backtick. Yes, that's actually closer to what I want.

    – Henning Makholm
    3 hours ago






  • 1





    And it does do the at least slightly fancy thing of displaying an orange border on the window it's about to switch to. I'll be looking for ways to configure it to be more conspicuous, but I think I can live with that. I'll leave the question open for a day or so in case someone can point to something fancier.

    – Henning Makholm
    3 hours ago



















  • Looks better than the default behavior, but doesn't quite fit what I'm hoping for. I've become accustomed to distinguishing between my various terminals by their location on the monitors -- and showing half-sized previews all moved to the middle of the screen won't really support that habit.

    – Henning Makholm
    4 hours ago











  • In this case, yo may want to look at the overview. Move your terminals to one workspace. Pressing <Super> will show them in a fixed order

    – vanadium
    4 hours ago











  • @henning Also try the <Alt><Esc> combination, it just switches to the next window and so on.

    – pomsky
    4 hours ago






  • 1





    @pomsky: Ah, sorry, I had it confused with alt-backtick. Yes, that's actually closer to what I want.

    – Henning Makholm
    3 hours ago






  • 1





    And it does do the at least slightly fancy thing of displaying an orange border on the window it's about to switch to. I'll be looking for ways to configure it to be more conspicuous, but I think I can live with that. I'll leave the question open for a day or so in case someone can point to something fancier.

    – Henning Makholm
    3 hours ago

















Looks better than the default behavior, but doesn't quite fit what I'm hoping for. I've become accustomed to distinguishing between my various terminals by their location on the monitors -- and showing half-sized previews all moved to the middle of the screen won't really support that habit.

– Henning Makholm
4 hours ago





Looks better than the default behavior, but doesn't quite fit what I'm hoping for. I've become accustomed to distinguishing between my various terminals by their location on the monitors -- and showing half-sized previews all moved to the middle of the screen won't really support that habit.

– Henning Makholm
4 hours ago













In this case, yo may want to look at the overview. Move your terminals to one workspace. Pressing <Super> will show them in a fixed order

– vanadium
4 hours ago





In this case, yo may want to look at the overview. Move your terminals to one workspace. Pressing <Super> will show them in a fixed order

– vanadium
4 hours ago













@henning Also try the <Alt><Esc> combination, it just switches to the next window and so on.

– pomsky
4 hours ago





@henning Also try the <Alt><Esc> combination, it just switches to the next window and so on.

– pomsky
4 hours ago




1




1





@pomsky: Ah, sorry, I had it confused with alt-backtick. Yes, that's actually closer to what I want.

– Henning Makholm
3 hours ago





@pomsky: Ah, sorry, I had it confused with alt-backtick. Yes, that's actually closer to what I want.

– Henning Makholm
3 hours ago




1




1





And it does do the at least slightly fancy thing of displaying an orange border on the window it's about to switch to. I'll be looking for ways to configure it to be more conspicuous, but I think I can live with that. I'll leave the question open for a day or so in case someone can point to something fancier.

– Henning Makholm
3 hours ago





And it does do the at least slightly fancy thing of displaying an orange border on the window it's about to switch to. I'll be looking for ways to configure it to be more conspicuous, but I think I can live with that. I'll leave the question open for a day or so in case someone can point to something fancier.

– Henning Makholm
3 hours ago


















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