![]() ![]() ![]() Next thing we want to imitate the home and end keys functionality with macOS command+left and command+right combinations not to mention the shift modifier that adds selection.So we need to differentiate between command and control keypress. By default, Eclipse IDE uses control+space to display assistant. So having command+space to show applications screen on Ubuntu was a must have for me. On macOS I often launch apps with Spotlight.Use left command to click select items in Nautilus and have all generic key combinations working across applications: command+s to save, command+b for bold text, command+n to create a new file and yada yada.Have left control working in Terminal to be able to kill processes with control+c, use default combinations for Nano editor etc.Here is the list of scenarios I’d like to have working: To my understanding Wayland is not mature enough to support the keyboard remapping functionality. At the moment only X.Org display server is supported. In this article I want to demonstrate the way I remap the keyboard on GNOME based Linux distribution (like Ubuntu or Fedora) in a way to mimic the macOS behaviour. A constant switching back and fourth between macOS, Linux (and Windows sometimes) made me look into the remapping issue. Or maybe you have a virtual guest machine with another system. The struggle becomes real if you are taking advantage of a number of computers around with different systems installed on a daily basis. ![]()
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