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Ubuntu change workspace
Ubuntu change workspace






I did some searching and reading, and not surprisingly, there was a bugzilla reported where I got some very good pointers. But to my surprise, I found out that you can do that for the first four workspaces only, see the “Switch to workspace X” in the Settings: So I set out to assign those very same key bindings in Gnome 3, too. As long as you’re using only one or two or three workspaces, it’s very easy to switch between those workspaces in the usual way (Super + PgUp/PgDown), but I’m used to having nine workspaces (each one designated to a different activity) and using the Superkey + number shortcut is by far the fastest way to go about it.

ubuntu change workspace

It’s a very fast method as you don’t even need to look at the keyboard.īut this turned out to be an issue. One thing that I really missed, however, was being able to switch between workspaces using the Superkey + a key on the Numpad. Also, the completely new ergonomic layout of Gnome 3, which I was not really used to, was not such a big issue for me because I’ve been mainly using this laptop for conference calls and documents editing, nothing fancy. It’s Lenovo T480s, which is more than generous as far as computing power goes, I’ve had no issues with Gnome 3 whatsoever on this machine. I really only started using Gnome 3 with RHEL 8 on my business laptop. To this date, I still have this old Lenovo X201t, which is 11 years old now, but it still makes for a pretty good bed-side laptop, especially because of its convertible nature and stylus (currently, I’m using LXQT there as a good lightweight option). For that reason, I preferred the already mentioned Mate, or i3wm, which consumed very little resources even on old hardware.

ubuntu change workspace

Partially because I was used to it, but more importantly, my home computers were never exactly the cutting edge of computer technology, quite to the contrary, resources were always somewhat scarce, and Gnome 3 was just too resource hungry for me to use it. As far as desktop environments go, I somehow got stuck in the Gnome 2 days, and when Gnome 3 became a thing, I simply carried on with its fork, Mate.








Ubuntu change workspace