via
is a more efficient way to interact with your computer.
Everything should be at most a few keystrokes away.
Once you get used to it, the time from when you decide to open a file (or application or website) to when you have it open in front of you will easily be less than one second.
Nobody should ever:
- browse folders searching for a file;
- search for the application to open in a launcher;
- search for an open window to switch to;
- reach for the mouse to open a file or launch an application;
- waste time doing things that can be done instantly by a computer.
If you have a document at ~/docs/work/drafts/letter.odt
you should not hunt for it in your file manager and open it. You should run via
(Alt-space
), type "let" (or "work odt", or any combination of substrings), press ENTER
and do what you wanted to do with that document.
via
can:
- open files (
/home/user/file.txt
); - open folders (
/home/user/music
); - open websites (
https://example.com
); - switch to an open window/app;
- search the web (
https://duckduckgo.com/?q=
,https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Search?search=
); - launch applications (
passmenu
,gimp
,st mutt
); - run shell commands (
pkill hung
).
It is advisable to bind via
to a hotkey such as Alt-Space
.
When run, via-menu
will be displayed. Type a few characters to select the entry you want to open and press ENTER
. via
will know if that's a file to open, program to launch, website or shell command.
To search the web, assuming your search engine is via
's first entry, just launch via, press TAB
, type your query and press ENTER
.
With appropriate URLs (such as https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Search?search=
) you will also be able to use via
to run custom web searches and have your browser open the result directly.
via
is made up of three parts:
via-feed
generates a list of menu options;via-menu
interacts with you and records your choice;via-open
opens or launches the choice.
However, via
is a concept and as such it is implementation-independent.
via-feed
, via-menu
, and via-open
are all configurable. To do so, copy them to $HOME/.config/via
and edit them to your liking. Your version will automatically be used.
via-feed
writes the menu options to standard output.
If you use the default via-feed
, you can tweak it by editing the shortcuts
and websites
files, but you are encouraged to edit via-feed
itself.
In particular, the find
command may be tweaked to exclude big folders that shouldn't be indexed (such as hidden folders, source code directories, and anything you are unlikely to open with via
).
via-menu
reads options on standard input, presents them to you, and outputs your choice(s) to standard output.
By default, dmenu
is used. However, you can use fzf
, rofi
, or even a combination of these (for example, fzf
when run in a terminal and dmenu
when run in a graphical environment).
via-open
reads newline-separated strings and:
- opens URLs in your favorite browser;
- opens files according to extension or mimetype, as specified in
via-open
itself; - opens folders in your file manager;
- switches to open windows;
- runs shell commands.