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KZones

KDE KWin Script for snapping windows into zones. Handy when using a (super) ultrawide monitor, an alternative to PowerToys FancyZones and Windows 11 snap layouts.

kde-store aur-package nixos-package

Features

Zone Selector

The Zone Selector is a small widget that appears when you drag a window to the top of the screen. It allows you to snap the window to a zone regardless of the current layout.

Zone Overlay

The Zone Overlay is a fullscreen overlay that appears when you move a window. It shows all zones from the current layout and the window will snap to the zone you drop it on.

Edge Snapping

Edge Snapping allows you to snap windows to zones by dragging them to the edge of the screen.

Multiple Layouts

Create multiple layouts and cycle between them.

Keyboard Shortcuts

KZones comes with a set of shortcuts to move your windows between zones and layouts.

Theming

By using the same colors as your selected color scheme, KZones will blend in perfectly with your desktop.

Installation

To install KZones you can either use the built-in script manager or clone the repo and build it yourself.

KWin Script Manager

Navigate to System Settings / Window Management / KWin Scripts / Get New… and search for KZones.

Depending on your Plasma version, one of these packages will be downloaded and installed:

Build it yourself

Make sure you have "zip" installed on your system before building.

git clone https://github.com/gerritdevriese/kzones
cd kzones && make

Configuration

General

Zone Selector

The zone selector is a small widget that appears when you drag a window to the top of the screen. It allows you to snap the window to a zone regardless of the current layout.

  • Enable or disable the zone selector.
  • Set the distance from the top of the screen at which the zone selector will start to appear.

Zone Overlay

The zone overlay is a fullscreen overlay that appears when you move a window. It shows all zones from the current layout and the window will snap to the zone you drop it on.

  • Enable or disable the zone overlay.
  • Choose whether the overlay should be shown when you start moving a window or when you press the toggle overlay shortcut.
  • Choose where the cursor needs to be in order to highlight a zone, either in the center of the zone or anywhere inside the zone.
  • Choose if you want the indicator to display all zones or only the highlighted zone.

Edge Snapping

Edge Snapping allows you to snap windows to zones by dragging them to the edge of the screen. Make sure to disable the default edge snapping functionality before enabling this.

  • Enable or disable edge snapping.
  • Set the distance from the edge of the screen at which the edge snapping will start to appear.

Remember and restore window geometries

The script will remember the geometry of each window when it's moved to a zone. When the window is moved out of the zone, it will be restored to it's original geometry.

  • Enable or disable this behavior.

Automatically snap all new windows

When a new window is launched, the script will automatically snap it to its closest zone.

  • Enable or disable this behavior.

Layouts

You can define your own layouts by modifying the JSON in the Layouts tab in the script settings, here are some examples to get you started:

Examples

Simple
[
    {
        "name": "Layout 1",
        "padding": 0,
        "zones": [
            {
                "x": 0,
                "y": 0,
                "height": 100,
                "width": 25
            },
            {
                "x": 25,
                "y": 0,
                "height": 100,
                "width": 50
            },
            {
                "x": 75,
                "y": 0,
                "height": 100,
                "width": 25
            }
        ]
    }
]
Advanced
[
    {
        "name": "Priority Grid",
        "padding": 0,
        "zones": [
            {
                "x": 0,
                "y": 0,
                "height": 100,
                "width": 25
            },
            {
                "x": 25,
                "y": 0,
                "height": 100,
                "width": 50,
                "applications": ["firefox"]
            },
            {
                "x": 75,
                "y": 0,
                "height": 100,
                "width": 25
            }
        ]
    },
    {
        "name": "Quadrant Grid",
        "padding": 0,
        "zones": [
            {
                "x": 0,
                "y": 0,
                "height": 50,
                "width": 50
            },
            {
                "x": 0,
                "y": 50,
                "height": 50,
                "width": 50
            },
            {
                "x": 50,
                "y": 50,
                "height": 50,
                "width": 50
            },
            {
                "x": 50,
                "y": 0,
                "height": 50,
                "width": 50
            }
        ]
    },
    {
        "name": "Columns",
        "padding": 0,
        "zones": [
            {
                "x": 0,
                "y": 0,
                "height": 100,
                "width": 25
            },
            {
                "x": 25,
                "y": 0,
                "height": 100,
                "width": 25
            },
            {
                "x": 50,
                "y": 0,
                "height": 100,
                "width": 25
            },
            {
                "x": 75,
                "y": 0,
                "height": 100,
                "width": 25
            }
        ]
    }
]

Explanation

The main array can contain as many layouts as you want:

Each layout object needs the following keys:

  • name: The name of the layout, shown when cycling between layouts
  • padding: The amount of space between the window and the zone in pixels
  • zones: An array containing all zone objects for this layout

Each zone object needs the following keys:

  • x, y: position of the top left corner of the zone in screen percentage
  • width, height: size of the zone in screen percentage
  • applications: an array of window classes that should snap to this zone when launched (optional)

Filters

Stop certain windows from snapping to zones by adding them to the filter list.

  • Select the filter mode, either Include or Exclude.
  • Add window classes to the list seperated by a newline.

You can enable the debug overlay to see the window class of the active window.

Advanced

Polling rate

The polling rate is the amount of time between each zone check when dragging a window. The default is 100ms, a faster polling rate is more accurate but will use more CPU. You can change this to your liking.

Debugging

Here you can enable logging or turn on the debug overlay.

Shortcuts

List of all available shortcuts:

Shortcut Default Binding
Move active window to zone Ctrl + Alt + Num 0-9
Move active window to previous zone Ctrl + Alt + Left
Move active window to next zone Ctrl + Alt + Right
Switch to previous window in current zone Ctrl + Alt + Down
Switch to next window in current zone Ctrl + Alt + Up
Cycle layouts Ctrl + Alt + D
Cycle layouts (reversed) Ctrl + Alt + Shift + D
Toggle zone overlay Ctrl + Alt + C
Activate layout Meta + Num 0-9
Move active window up Meta + Up
Move active window down Meta + Down
Move active window left Meta + Left
Move active window right Meta + Right
Snap all windows Meta + Space
Snap active window Meta + Shift + Space

To change the default bindings, go to System Settings / Shortcuts and search for KZones

Note

Not all shortcuts will be bound by default as they conflift with existing system bindings.

Tips and Tricks

Animate window movements

Install the "Geometry change" KWin effect to animate window movements: https://store.kde.org/p/2136283

Trigger KWin shortcuts using a command

Replace the last part with any shortcut from the list above:

qdbus org.kde.kglobalaccel /component/kwin invokeShortcut "KZones: Cycle layouts"

Clean corrupted shortcuts

Sometimes KWin can leave behind corrupt or missing shortcuts in the Settings after uninstalling or updating scripts, you can remove those using this command:

qdbus org.kde.kglobalaccel /component/kwin org.kde.kglobalaccel.Component.cleanUp

Troubleshooting

The script doesn't work

Check if your KDE Plasma version is at 6 or higher (for older versions, check the releases)
Make sure there is at least one layout defined in the script settings and that it contains at least one zone.

My settings are not saved

After changing settings, reload the script by disabling, saving and enabling it again.
This is a known issue with the KWin Scripting API

The screen turns black while moving a window

If you are using X11 make sure your compositor is enabled, as it is needed to draw transparent windows.
You can find this setting in System Settings / Display and Monitor / Compositor

Auto-update broke KZones on Plasma 5

Due to API changes in KWin 6, the newer versions of the script are not backwards compatible with Plasma 5.
If you were already subscribed to KZones using the script manager and updated to the latest version by accident, you will need to uninstall the script and subscribe to "KZones for Plasma 5" instead.