![]() ![]() To enable it, set the environment variable GLFW_IM_MODULE=ibus. Kitty support for IBus IME framework is disabled by default. The official documentation is available locally at /usr/share/doc/kitty/html/index.html.The default configuration file at /usr/share/doc/kitty/nf is self-documenting with comments explaining each option.You can see all available options in the official documentation or nf(5). Fonts, colors, cursors and scrollback behaviors can be adjusted. Kitty stores its configuration in ~/.config/kitty/nf and the default configuration can be found at /usr/share/doc/kitty/nf. ~/.config/kitty/nf clipboard_control write-clipboard read-clipboardįor more information, see the official documentation. To disable this, edit the clipboard_control option in the configuration file: This command will show a permission popup by default. ![]() To output the current clipboard contents to stdout: This kitten is used to read and write to the system clipboard and can be used to work with a clipboard even over ssh. For more information, see the official documentation. You can pass directories instead of files for a recursive diff. It displays diffs for images as well as text files. Optionally, install python-pygments for syntax highlighting. ![]() This kitten requires either git or diffutils to be installed. For more information, see the official documentation diff Several applications such as ranger and neofetch use this protocol for displaying images in the terminal. This also works over ssh to display images from a remote server. Instead of an image file, you can pass a directory or an image url. It can also display animated gifs in the terminal. This kitten is based on the kitty graphics protocol. The commands for all kittens are prefixed with kitty +kitten, so it is convenient to use them as shell aliases. Kitty has a framework for creating subprograms called kittens. Moreover, new text effects like curly-underline are also available for applications that support it. ![]() Layouts are switchable through Ctrl+Shift+l and can be saved/restored.Ī full keyboard mode provides distinction between ambiguous keys like Ctrl+i vs Tab. New tabs and windows can be created and resized through various Ctrl+Shift shortcuts. Install the kitty package or kitty-git AUR for the development version. It also offers tiling capabilities, like GNU Screen or tmux. If you work for a formal publication, check how it’s spelled in your organization’s style guide or recommended dictionary.Kitty is a scriptable OpenGL based terminal emulator with TrueColor, ligatures support, protocol extensions for keyboard input and image rendering. The bottom line is that kitty-corner is considered dialect and informal and you can spell it pretty much any way you want, although it does always take a hyphen. My mom used to say kitty-wampus (which the OED spells as catawampous), and I was disappointed to see that the OED lists the origin as unknown. The opens in a new windowDictionary of American Regional English has even more variants: kitty-cross, kitty-katty, kittering, and kitty-wampus, which means “askew” instead of “diagonally across” like all the others. In many cases, it seemed as if people may have only heard the saying and then guessed at the spelling: What surprised me most about this survey was how many words people reported using other than kitty-corner and catty-corner. (h/t to opens in a new for the Ngram search.) Regional DifferencesĪs you can see from the map of responses, people in the South, as far west as Texas and as far north as Pennsylvania and Nebraska, are much more likely to say catty-corner, whereas everyone else in the US and Canada is more likely to say kitty-corner. The Oxford English Dictionary lists cater-corner as the main word and calls kitty-corner and catty-corner variants, but these are also Americanisms and the OED has a British bent, so I’m not surprised to find in opens in a new windowan Ngram search that kitty-corner and catty-corner are actually used far more often than cater-corner. ![]()
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