How to use Quake-style terminals on GNU/Linux

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We know all about how powerful the GNU/Linux terminal is. However, it’s a pain to have to fire up a terminal emulator like Konsole or gnome-terminal, wait for a few seconds for it load, and then have to keep Alt-Tabbing to it. Wouldn’t it be easier to just have a terminal that automatically hides and shows itself at click of a button? Today, I’m going to look at three different terminal emulators that do just that.

What the heck is a Quake-style terminal?

Quake is a wildly popular first person shooter created by id Software. In the game, there is a terminal that is accessible by hitting the ~ key. It is used to edit settings and variables, show logs, and enter commands and cheats (for more, read the Quake-style Console article at Wikipedia). Quake isn’t the only program that has this functionality: Doom, Half-Life, Dark Engine, Lithtech, and several other games and game engines use similar consoles.

Figure 1: The console in NightFall (a mod for Half-Life 2)
Figure 1: The console in NightFall (a mod for Half-Life 2)

Kuake: Quake-style terminal for KDE

A long time ago in an IDE far far away… OK, so it wasn’t that long ago (unless January 2003 is really “long ago”) and it wasn’t that far away. Anyway, not so long ago in an IDE not so far far away, Kuake was born. Martin Galpin got the bright idea of creating a Quake-style front-end to Konsole. The idea was that you’d hit a hotkey (at the time, Ctrl-K) and Konsole would slide down from the top of the screen. You could resize it, realign it, and much more. When it came it, it achieved great success (Unfortunately, development seemed to freeze after the release of an unstable 0.3 release in March 2004.

Even though Kuake hasn’t been updated recently, you can still install it. The site offers a tar.gz source archive, a Debian package is available at deb ftp://ftp.berlios.de/pub/kazit/debs, Ubuntu has a package called kuake in the Universe repository, and many other distributions offer packages. The hotkey is Alt-~ (available after you launch Kuake).

Figure 2: Kuake
Figure 2: Kuake

YaKuake: Yet Another Kuake KDE terminal emulator

Meanwhile, in another part of the galaxy, a French programmer named Francois Chazal was working on a forked version of Kuake known as YaKuake (Yet Another Kuake KDE terminal emulator). YaKuake added several features including inline tab renaming, better Xinerama support, and skins. Like its predecessor, its popularity skyrocketed, reaching over 25,000 downloads and earning a 5 star rating from the famous software repository Softpedia.

YaKuake offers a tar.bz2 source archive. Many distributions offer it as a package in their repositories. The hotkey for launching YaKuake (after it is running) is by default F12, but you can change it to whatever you want (I like Kuake’s default Alt-~ myself).

Figure 3: YaKuake
Figure 3: YaKuake

Tilda: Quake terminal for Gnome

KDE users weren’t the only ones having fun with Quake-style terminals. In December 2004, Tristan Sloughter (aka kungfooguru) released Tilda (named so because tilde, the ~ symbol and often the hotkey for Quake-style terminals, was already taken), a GTK+ Quake-style terminal emulator. Like Kuake and YaKuake, it took off, reaching 12,000+ downloads in 3 years.

Tilda provides a tar.gz source archive, but many distributions provide packages. Once you install it, run tilda -C to configure it. Then run Tilda with the command tilda. Options are available via tilda -h. Tabs are available too. Access keys are Ctrl-Shift-T (New Tab), Ctrl-Shift-PageUp (Next Tab), Ctrl-Shift-PageDown (Prev Tab) and Alt-#(go to 1 to 10th tab)

Figure 4: Tilda
Figure 4: Tilda

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Copyright information

This entry is (C) Copyright by its author, 2004-2008. Unless a different license is specified in the entry's body, the following license applies: "Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted in any medium without royalty provided this notice is preserved and appropriate attribution information (author, original site, original URL) is included".

Biography

Andrew Min: Definition: Andrew Min (n): a non-denominational, Bible-believing, evangelical Christian. (n): a Kubuntu Linux lover (n): a hard core geek (n): a journalist for several online publications (see them all at http://www.andrewmin.com/ )

milianw's picture

wallpaper in yakukae screenshot

Submitted by milianw on Tue, 2007-08-14 18:41.

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Hello Andrew!

I'm also using yakuake all the time, it's a very neat program.

Could you possibly point me to the place where I can obtain the wallpaper shown in the yakuake screenshot?

--
http://milianw.de

offset's picture

I would personally recommend

Submitted by offset (not verified) on Tue, 2007-08-14 21:11.

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I would personally recommend YeahConsole. Its probably the lightest of the bunch.
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http://phrat.de/yeahtools.html
http://freshmeat.net/projects/yeahconsole/

nh2's picture

doesn't compile

Submitted by nh2 (not verified) on Thu, 2007-10-04 10:12.

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YeahConsole seems great but it didn't compile on my ubuntu :-(

zenmatt's picture

in Feisty universe

Submitted by zenmatt (not verified) on Fri, 2007-10-05 18:46.

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In Feisty you should be able to install yeahconsole using Synaptic if you've enabled the universe repositories.
http://packages.ubuntu.com/feisty/x11/yeahconsole



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