[konsole] [Bug 470040] favorite commands list feature

Andrea bugzilla_noreply at kde.org
Sun May 21 15:37:54 BST 2023


https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=470040

--- Comment #4 from Andrea <canerandagio1983 at gmail.com> ---
Happy to hear you Tomaz.

1) Yes, this is what I thought first.

I imagined using Konsole's menu, maybe a menu item before "help", by clicking
the item I saw the descriptions of the commands that I use most often or that I
wanted to save for rapid use.

2) I tried to use `ctrl + alt + i 'but I did not find help in looking for the
command I wanted, I did not understand if this feature is already implemented
for the Shell commands.

However, it could be a good choice to adopt a system similar to this, maybe it
would be appropriate to separate the Shell commands from those that are already
in this functionality, like closing a card.

3) I found no other plugins apart from the "ssh manager".
Are there any others? I did a quick search but I didn't find anything else.

The use of the plugin to implement this feature would be another solution,
perhaps by pressing a shortcut could appear a menu on the right or left with
the favorite clutches of the Shell, perhaps it is even better than my first
idea.



I was thinking of a list of alphabetically ordered commands, or a command list
organized by categories but while maintaining an alphabetical order within each
category.
In reality, the list shows the description of the command for example "Ubuntu
Version" while the command that will launch in the shell is "lsb_release -a".

Or the choice to use a search bar, as I said just a little more, could be a
better solution. But I believe the research must also be done on the basis of
the description of the command, not only on the basis of the command itself.

Thanks for the interest in my idea,
Andrea

> Andrea,
> 
> There's already a few different ways to achieve what you want:
> 1 - Allow toolbars, and add your favorite actions on the toolbar - this
> adds the "favorite visibility" that I believe it's what you are looking for.
> 2 - Use `ctrl + alt + i` to open a searchable list of menu entries in
> konsole (this is my personal favorite since I never remember in which level
> of depthness is the command I'm looking for)
> 3 - Use the `commands` plugin - albeit it's not exactly what you described,
> I feel that some of the things you want to do could be setup there (maybe?)
> 
> Please tell me what you think.
> Best,
> Tomaz

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