From 8e55190c31ba48fc5a21e54ba312edea1baa4a99 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: David Heinemeier Hansson Date: Mon, 3 Jun 2024 15:32:08 -0700 Subject: [PATCH] Wordwrap --- help/tactile.md | 15 ++++++++++++--- 1 file changed, 12 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) diff --git a/help/tactile.md b/help/tactile.md index 9d6aa62..93e2e22 100644 --- a/help/tactile.md +++ b/help/tactile.md @@ -1,10 +1,19 @@ # Tactile -Tactile is a tool for tiling windows on larger displays. It's not a tiling windows manager, like i3 or Hyprland, so it works alongside the regular Ubuntu Gnome window system that anyone coming from Windows or Mac would be familiar with. By default, Omakub has configured it with 6 slots, using one main column, and two wings. This is a great setup for having your editor in the center, flanked by docs and browser and AI helpers and what else. +Tactile is a tool for tiling windows on larger displays. It's not a tiling windows manager, like i3 or Hyprland, +so it works alongside the regular Ubuntu Gnome window system that anyone coming from Windows or Mac would be +familiar with. By default, Omakub has configured it with 6 slots, using one main column, and two wings. This is +a great setup for having your editor in the center, flanked by docs and browser and AI helpers and what else. -You don't need or probably even want to use this when using a smaller laptop, like a Framework 13. On a screen like that, you're better off either using your applications full-screen and switching between workspaces, or just using the two-way default Gnome tiling. Super+ and Super+ controls the default Gnome window tiler, putting the active application on either the left or the right. Super+ will maximize the application. And, finally, F11 takes an application full screen. +You don't need or probably even want to use this when using a smaller laptop, like a Framework 13. On a screen +like that, you're better off either using your applications full-screen and switching between workspaces, or +just using the two-way default Gnome tiling. Super+ and Super+ controls the default +Gnome window tiler, putting the active application on either the left or the right. Super+ will +maximize the application. And, finally, F11 takes an application full screen. -But when you are on that big scren, use Tactile with Super+T to bring up the tiling overview. Then press W+S to make the application take up the two center slots. You can also do Super+Q+Q to take up just the Q slot in the upper left slot. Or even Super+Q+S to take up the four slots on the left of the screen. +But when you are on that big scren, use Tactile with Super+T to bring up the tiling overview. Then press W+S +to make the application take up the two center slots. You can also do Super+Q+Q to take up just the Q slot in +the upper left slot. Or even Super+Q+S to take up the four slots on the left of the screen. ## Hotkeys