https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=470040
--- Comment #5 from tcanabr...@kde.org --- Hello Andrea, Because you only have the ssh plugin, that means you are running a quite old version of Konsole - it was the first plug-in I made as a proof of concept that the idea would work. Is there any chance you can update your version to get the quick commands plug-in? I believe it will solve most of the issues. As for a way to add a favorite menu, this wouldn’t be done on Konsole but on the “kxmlgui” framework, in a way that all kde applications can benefit from. Best On Sun, 21 May 2023 at 16:38 Andrea <bugzilla_nore...@kde.org> wrote: > https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=470040 > > --- Comment #4 from Andrea <canerandagio1...@gmail.com> --- > Happy to hear you Tomaz. > > 1) Yes, this is what I thought first. > > I imagined using Konsole's menu, maybe a menu item before "help", by > clicking > the item I saw the descriptions of the commands that I use most often or > that I > wanted to save for rapid use. > > 2) I tried to use `ctrl + alt + i 'but I did not find help in looking for > the > command I wanted, I did not understand if this feature is already > implemented > for the Shell commands. > > However, it could be a good choice to adopt a system similar to this, > maybe it > would be appropriate to separate the Shell commands from those that are > already > in this functionality, like closing a card. > > 3) I found no other plugins apart from the "ssh manager". > Are there any others? I did a quick search but I didn't find anything else. > > The use of the plugin to implement this feature would be another solution, > perhaps by pressing a shortcut could appear a menu on the right or left > with > the favorite clutches of the Shell, perhaps it is even better than my first > idea. > > > > I was thinking of a list of alphabetically ordered commands, or a command > list > organized by categories but while maintaining an alphabetical order within > each > category. > In reality, the list shows the description of the command for example > "Ubuntu > Version" while the command that will launch in the shell is "lsb_release > -a". > > Or the choice to use a search bar, as I said just a little more, could be a > better solution. But I believe the research must also be done on the basis > of > the description of the command, not only on the basis of the command > itself. > > Thanks for the interest in my idea, > Andrea > > > Andrea, > > > > There's already a few different ways to achieve what you want: > > 1 - Allow toolbars, and add your favorite actions on the toolbar - this > > adds the "favorite visibility" that I believe it's what you are looking > for. > > 2 - Use `ctrl + alt + i` to open a searchable list of menu entries in > > konsole (this is my personal favorite since I never remember in which > level > > of depthness is the command I'm looking for) > > 3 - Use the `commands` plugin - albeit it's not exactly what you > described, > > I feel that some of the things you want to do could be setup there > (maybe?) > > > > Please tell me what you think. > > Best, > > Tomaz > > -- > You are receiving this mail because: > You are the assignee for the bug. -- You are receiving this mail because: You are watching all bug changes.