This is my personal Phoenix configuration, written in TypeScript. I also created typings for it, feel free to use them.
The definition of hyper
and hyperShift
can be found in src/config.ts.
hyper + Left
(Left half of screen)hyper + Right
(Right half of screen)hyper + Up
(Top half of screen height, keeps current width)hyper + Down
(Bottom half of screen height, keeps current width)hyper + Return
(Toggle maximize, remembers unmaximized position)hyper + Tab
(Jump to next screen whilst keeping relative size and placement)hyper + Delete
(Minimize focused window)hyperShift + Left
(Move window to left edge of screen)hyperShift + Right
(Move window to right edge of screen)hyperShift + Up
(Move window to top edge of screen)hyperShift + Down
(Move window to bottom edge of screen)hyperShift + Return
(Move window to center of screen)hyperShift + Tab
(Jump to next screen whilst maintaining current window size)
Use combos of the key bindings to further place the windows:
hyper + Left
+hyper + Down
(Bottom left corner of screen)hyper + Enter
+hyper + Up
(Top half of screen, full width)
I've optimized the key bindings for my common use-case, showing two windows on one screen and moving windows between screens.
hyper + c
(Start coffee timer, defaults to 8 minutes)hyper + +
(Increase monitor brightness using external script)hyper + -
(Decrease monitor brightness using external script)hyper + Space
(Experimental: search for windows, tab to cycle, enter to switch, esc to cancel)§
(Show or hide the last used Terminal window)Cmd + §
(Cycle between Terminal windows)Cmd + Escape
(Cycle between windows of current application, including minimized and windows on a different screen)Cmd + Shift + Escape
(Same asCmd + Escape
except in reverse order)Cmd + h
(Hides the focused app or all visible apps if held down)
- Switch between Karabiner-Elements profiles when screens change
- Refresh screen brightness info when screens change (using
ddcctl
) - Support disabling / re-enabling all current keybindings via src/key.ts (used by scanner)
git clone https://github.com/mafredri/phoenix-config.git
cd phoenix-config
yarn install
yarn run build
The TypeScript compiler and Webpack will produce out/phoenix.js
that can be used as Phoenix configuration.
For development, yarn start
will run Webpack in watch-mode.
In a terminal, run:
$ log stream --process Phoenix
Anything logged via logger (import log from './logger';
) will show up as human friendly output in the terminal. Phoenix.log
can also be used, but it only supports strings, much of the heavy lifting is already done by logger to create a similar experience to console.log
in the browser.
You can also read about Attaching to Web Inspector for Debugging in the Phoenix wiki. This gives access to true console.log
and ability to use debugger
statements in your code.