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🧊 Indulge in nostalgia with useless 3D effects.

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A Desktop Cube for GNOME Shell


Important

The code in the main branch is for GNOME Shell 45+. For older GNOME versions, please use the gnome-40-41 or gnome-42-44 branches respectively.

When I started using Linux more than a decade ago, it was because of the 3D desktop cube of Compiz. Even if this was a pretty useless feature, I am still missing it today. Therefore, I decided to create a similar effect for GNOME Shell. If you like it, you may also be interested in other nostalgic extensions, such as Compiz windows effects, or Burn-My-Windows!

For a list of things changed in previous releases, you can have a look at the changelog!

πŸŽ‰ Features

feature01
3D Overview: The extension arranges the workspaces in the overview in a cube-like fashion.
feature02
3D Workspaces: Also, when switching workspaces with touch gestures or keyboard shortcuts, the cube is shown.
feature03
Click and drag the desktop to rotate the cube: You can click and drag anywhere on the desktop to start rotating the cube!
feature04
Click and drag the panel to rotate the cube: You can also trigger the cube by dragging on the panel. This is useful with maximized windows.
feature05
Click and drag the overview to rotate the cube: You can also click and drag the overview's background to rotate the cube.
feature06
Explode the cube on vertical rotations: If you rotate the cube up or down, the 3D effect will become more intense.
feature07
Smooth transitions between Desktop, Overview, and App Drawer: If you enter the app-drawer mode, the cube will be unfolded.
feature08
Dynamic workspaces: The extension supports any number of workspaces. So it's actually not a cube most of the time...
feature09
Background panoramas: You can select an image which will be used as 360Β° skybox.
feature10
Drag windows to other workspaces: You can directly drag windows to adjacent workspaces. This also works in the overview.

πŸͺ² Limitations

Issues are tracked here on GitHub. There are currently two main known limitations:

  • No wrap-around: In GNOME Shell, it is not possible to change from the last to the first workspace. The Desktop-Cube extension does not change this.
  • Bad multi-monitor support on X11: On X11, GNOME Shell uses the same projection and view matrices for all monitors. The extension can modify these matrices so that the projection center of the virtual camera is in front of the current monitor. However, the cube looks somewhat sheared on setups with multiple monitors if the cube is shown on all monitors.

πŸ’ž Show that you love the Desktop Cube!

kofi github paypal crypto

While coding new features or translating the Desktop Cube is the most awesome way to contribute, providing financial support will encourage me to invest my spare time for developing free and open-source software.

These awesome people have already donated to the development of my open-source projects:

Sponsors List

Do you want to show that you love it too? If you donate via Ko-fi, GitHub, or PayPal, you will show up in this list as well!

⬇️ Installation

You can either install the Desktop Cube extension from extensions.gnome.org (a), download a stable release from GitHub (b) or clone the latest version directly with git (c).

a) Installing from extensions.gnome.org

This is the easiest way to install the Desktop Cube extension. Just head over to extensions.gnome.org and flip the switch! If you want to use a more up-to-date version, you can try one of the methods listed below.

b) Downloading a Stable Release

Execute this command to download the latest stable release:

wget https://github.com/Schneegans/Desktop-Cube/releases/latest/download/desktop-cube@schneegans.git.luolix.top.zip

Install it by executing the following command. If you have the Desktop Cube extension already installed and want to upgrade to the latest version, append the --force flag in order to overwrite existing installs of the Desktop Cube extension.

gnome-extensions install desktop-cube@schneegans.git.luolix.top.zip

Then restart GNOME Shell with Alt + F2, r + Enter. Or logout / login if you are on Wayland. Then you can enable the extension with the Gnome Tweak Tool, the Extensions application or with this command:

gnome-extensions enable desktop-cube@schneegans.github.com

c) Cloning the Latest Version with git

You should not clone the Desktop Cube extension directly to the ~/.local/share/gnome-shell/extensions directory as this may get overridden occasionally! Execute the clone command below where you want to have the source code of the extension.

git clone https://github.com/Schneegans/Desktop-Cube.git
cd Desktop-Cube

If your GNOME Shell version is <= 45, you will have to checkout the gnome-42-44 branch:

git checkout gnome-42-44

Now you will have to install the extension. The make command below compiles the locales, schemas and resources, creates a zip file of the extension and finally installs it with the gnome-extensions tool.

make install

Then restart GNOME Shell with Alt + F2, r + Enter. Or logout / login if you are on Wayland. Then you can enable the extension with the Gnome Tweak Tool, the Extensions application or with this command:

gnome-extensions enable desktop-cube@schneegans.github.com

:octocat: I want to contribute!

That's great! Here are some basic rules to get you started: Commits should start with a Capital letter and should be written in present tense (e.g. πŸŽ‰ Add cool new feature instead of πŸŽ‰ Added cool new feature). You should also start your commit message with one applicable emoji. This does not only look great but also makes you rethink what to add to a commit. Make many but small commits!

Emoji Description
πŸŽ‰ :tada: When you added a cool new feature.
πŸ”§ :wrench: When you added a piece of code.
♻️ :recycle: When you refactored a part of the code.
✨ :sparkles: When you applied clang-format.
🌐 :globe_with_meridians: When you worked on translations.
🎨 :art: When you improved / added assets like themes.
πŸ’„ :lipstick: When you worked on the UI of the preferences dialog.
πŸš€ :rocket: When you improved performance.
πŸ“ :memo: When you wrote documentation.
πŸͺ² :beetle: When you fixed a bug.
πŸ’ž :revolving_hearts: When a new sponsor is added or credits are updated.
βœ”οΈ :heavy_check_mark: When you worked on checks or adjusted the code to be compliant with them.
πŸ”€ :twisted_rightwards_arrows: When you merged a branch.
πŸ”₯ :fire: When you removed something.
🚚 :truck: When you moved / renamed something.