#If just filename and no path is given, assume that it's in current directory #Set different seperator to avoid problems with spaces So lets create a script in /usr/local/bin: /usr/local/bin/fehl ‚ it would be the behaviour i want, but it’s a bit uncomfortable to type. If you just execute ‚feh‘ in a directory, you will be able to browse through all images, but it starts with some random first one. Create a script, so that you are always able to browse through all images in a directoryĬurrently, when you open a image with ‚feh filename.png‘, it would open just this one image and you would not be able browse through the whole directory. ![]() I am used to mpv and mplayer, so i expect F to be the button for fullscreen. This config-file removes the strange behaviour of feh to save a filelist when you press F and binds it to toggle fullscreen instead. Without those options, the zooming levels would get messed up every time when you change the size of the windows. ‚–geometry 500×500‘ and ‚–auto-zoom‘ are actually very important for the use in Tiling WMs. ‚-b Black‘ means that the background is black (and not those ugly tiles), ‚-d‘ means that it draws the filename in the upper left corner, ‚-N‘ means that there is no right-click-menu. Here is the config files i use: ~/.config/feh/themes There are three possible config files, one is called ‚themes‘ (it is the file for default command line arguments), one is called ‚keys‘ for key bindings and one is called ‚buttons‘ for mouse button bindings. The global config files would be in /etc/feh and the user config files in ~/.config/feh. So it makes sense to make a feh config-file (which basically is just a list of command line arguments which will get loaded by default). Config filesįeh comes with many command line options (just enter man feh) and it needs a lot of them to really look nice. Who needs an user interface just for some back/forward/zoom buttons anyway? Just use the cursor keys for that. ![]() Since everything on this system should be a bit lightweight i thought about trying feh (wich was already installed) as the default image viewer … and i have to say that it’s surprisingly nice. I bought a new miniPC and use it as a HTPC with a nice Debian Installation and AwesomeWM.
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