Pixel Saver is an extension for Gnome Shell that merge the activity bar and the title bar of maximized window. It is especially interesting for small screens, but MOAR pixels for your apps is always good!
The extension has no configuration. Its behavior is made to mimic the one of the title bar and settings affecting the title bar should reflect in Pixel Saver. It Just Works!
For applications using the modern GTK header bar, there are no space savings, but the application title is still displayed in the top panel to achieve a uniform appearance.
The title bar is completely gone and integrated to the activity bar. |
It is largely inspired by bios and mathematicalcoffee's Window Buttons Extension and mathematicalcoffee's maximus extension and some code come from there. You may want to check theses out, especially if you want something more configurable.
Gnome Shell version | Pixel saver version | Recommended installation method |
---|---|---|
43 | 1.30 | GNOME extensions |
42 | 1.28 | GNOME extensions |
41 | 1.26 | GNOME extensions |
40 | 1.24 | GNOME extensions |
3.38 | 1.24 | GNOME extensions |
3.36 | 1.24 | GNOME extensions |
3.34 | 1.24 | GNOME extensions |
3.32 | 1.20 | GNOME extensions |
3.30 | 1.18 | GNOME extensions |
3.26 | 1.14 | GNOME extensions |
3.24 | 1.12 | GNOME extensions |
3.15 | 1.10 | GNOME extensions |
3.14 | 1.5.1 | GNOME extensions |
3.12 | 1.3 | GNOME extensions |
Pixel saver has been available for a long time on GNOME Extensions website (so it is on GNOME Software, too).
- (eventually) switch to the tag for your version from this page;
- download the repo's zip from the green button;
- navigate from your home to the gnome shell extension directory
.local/share/gnome-shell/extensions
; - unzip the
pixel-saver@deadalnix.me
directory in extension directory; - reload
gnome-shell
pressing Alt + F2 and entering r; - enable the extension using GNOME Tweaks.
# Clone repository
git clone https://github.com/deadalnix/pixel-saver.git
# Enter cloned directory
cd pixel-saver
# Switch to the proper tag
git checkout tags/1.24
# copy to extensions directory
cp -r pixel-saver@deadalnix.me -t ~/.local/share/gnome-shell/extensions
# You may need to reload GNOME Shell to recognise new extension by
# hitting Alt + F2 and entering "r"
# activate
# GNOME <3.38
gnome-shell-extension-tool -e pixel-saver@deadalnix.me
# GNOME >= 3.38
gnome-extensions enable pixel-saver@deadalnix.me
Pixel Saver depends on Xorg's xprop
and xwininfo
utilities. If not already
present on your system, these can be installed using:
- Debian/Ubuntu:
apt install x11-utils
- Fedora/RHEL:
dnf install xorg-x11-utils
- Arch:
pacman -S xorg-xprop
Since this extension relies on features provided by X.org, by default it won't work on GTK 3.x+ windows
in wayland sessions.
Neverthless, you can still run any GTK application in x11 mode setting
the GDK_BACKEND
variable to x11
, i.e.
GDK_BACKEND=x11 <application_name>
on the opposite, QT applications need the variable QT_QPA_PLATFORM
to be set to wayland
to not run in x11 mode.
If you need a particular program to always run in a given mode, copy its desktop file from
/usr/share/applications
to your user XDG applications directory (~/.local/share/applications
)
and edit the Exec
line to look like this one
Exec=env GDK_BACKEND=x11 <your_application>
then run update-desktop-database
to refresh menu entries.
Soon!
If you want to see what the full desktop look like with this extension, you can check out what a unmaximized window looks like, as well as a maximized one.