Just installed it and started using.
It is timely as I have to fill a number of forms today on government sites so looking forward to using it.
What are some best practices you have come up with for reducing the cognitive load for the trigger lifecycle - that is detect the need, come up with one that fits an easy to retrieve mental model? Namespacing obviously comes to mind, and some trigger design should be as conflict free as possible, yet brief:
:i.a - address
:i.n - name
:i.p - phone
Debating if I should feed my zsh history to chatgpt and as it to come up with some.
Any other advice from the power users?
I love espanso! The cross-platform support is huge (I use it on macOS, windows, and X11 and Wayland-based Linux systems).
Moreover, the original creator (Federico) and the current head maintainer to whom he has handed most of the day-to-day (AucaCoyan) are two of the kindest people I have ever come across in open source. All issues and contributors are treated with respect, it really is refreshing to feel so welcome when trying to contribute.
Autohotkey is go to on Windows for stuff like this, and its called hotstrings [1]. Hotstrings are much more powerfull. Trigger can for example run arbitrary function. AFAIK on linux, you can run it using wine.
I think the problem Espanso is trying to solve should be addressed by GUI toolkits, like GTK, QT, etc. Otherwise, living with an authorized keylogger in our system in order to introduce unicode characters seems overkill.
I found Espanso very useful, but some bugs made me move on to Raycast, BetterTouchTool, etc. for similar functionality. For example, if Espanso config file is on a cloud drive, it doesn't automatically sync or read the file upon reboot.
I'm planning to move back to Espanso though, as Raycast is moving in the wrong direction with all the AI non-features.
Can't you just write a startup script that waits 1 minutes after a reboot and then restarts the Espanso service to apply the freshly downloaded config?
Have been using it for some years now. On Linux at least, it's easy to install and maintain.
The size of my snippets list is now a testament of its usefulness. On the appropriate context (an online meeting, for instance), it feels like a superpower.
I’m using it on KDE for quite some time now. It’s very useful, but sometimes types too fast and eats keystrokes. Other than that it’s flawless. Can recommend to anyone.
I use it to shorten common requests I have for my colleagues, e.g. to not forget their code reviews, or alias phrases I commonly use to a :command. It's handy as a form filler too.
I've seen people using it to insert emojis, lorem ipsum text, or fixing common typos. It's quite powerful because you can even do HTTP requests and mash them with your text.
I'm now thinking about writing an expansion to help me reference tickets, e.g. expand :searchticket <string> to a list of up to 5 URLs. Since it happens inline, I don't have to "submit" the list to anything/anyone until I've cleaned up the message.
Just installed it and started using. It is timely as I have to fill a number of forms today on government sites so looking forward to using it. What are some best practices you have come up with for reducing the cognitive load for the trigger lifecycle - that is detect the need, come up with one that fits an easy to retrieve mental model? Namespacing obviously comes to mind, and some trigger design should be as conflict free as possible, yet brief:
Debating if I should feed my zsh history to chatgpt and as it to come up with some. Any other advice from the power users?I was using `,.` as the trigger, as I don't think there are any real-life uses of that simple combo.
etc.I love espanso! The cross-platform support is huge (I use it on macOS, windows, and X11 and Wayland-based Linux systems).
Moreover, the original creator (Federico) and the current head maintainer to whom he has handed most of the day-to-day (AucaCoyan) are two of the kindest people I have ever come across in open source. All issues and contributors are treated with respect, it really is refreshing to feel so welcome when trying to contribute.
Autohotkey is go to on Windows for stuff like this, and its called hotstrings [1]. Hotstrings are much more powerfull. Trigger can for example run arbitrary function. AFAIK on linux, you can run it using wine.
[1] https://www.autohotkey.com/docs/v2/Hotstrings.htm
I think the problem Espanso is trying to solve should be addressed by GUI toolkits, like GTK, QT, etc. Otherwise, living with an authorized keylogger in our system in order to introduce unicode characters seems overkill.
I found Espanso very useful, but some bugs made me move on to Raycast, BetterTouchTool, etc. for similar functionality. For example, if Espanso config file is on a cloud drive, it doesn't automatically sync or read the file upon reboot.
I'm planning to move back to Espanso though, as Raycast is moving in the wrong direction with all the AI non-features.
Can't you just write a startup script that waits 1 minutes after a reboot and then restarts the Espanso service to apply the freshly downloaded config?
that seems less than optimal, the whole service needs to restart 1 minute after a reboot?
on edit: changed system to service
Have been using it for some years now. On Linux at least, it's easy to install and maintain.
The size of my snippets list is now a testament of its usefulness. On the appropriate context (an online meeting, for instance), it feels like a superpower.
Anyone know how to change the default :date output to YYYY-MM-DD instead of MM/DD/YYYY on macOS?
I’ve tried the following in default.yml and reloading the config, but it’s not working and Claude, Gemini, and myself are stumped :)
Solution: Edit the # Print the current date section in…
…to read:I know it's not perhaps helpful, but I have the _exact_ same code, and it's worked for ages on macOS. Do other matches work correctly?
I have it in `~/.config/espanso/match/base.yml`.
I shell out to POSIX `date` on Linux and I believe also on Windows:
Put it in match/base.yml
This is basically what Data Detectors natively does in macOS, is it?
My cross-platform, FOSS text editor, KeenWrite[1], does something similar[2]. Pressing Ctrl+Space inserts the nearest matching variable into the text.
[1]: https://keenwrite.com/
[2]: https://youtu.be/CFCqe3A5dFg?list=PLB-WIt1cZYLm1MMx2FBG9KWzP...
This is how you do a Readme / went in having no clue what a text expander was and within 5 seconds understood what it was from a small gif.
Also works with Android
https://github.com/lochidev/Expandroid
I love espanso. I use it daily. Simplicity is perfect, it does one thing and does it well.
I’m using it on KDE for quite some time now. It’s very useful, but sometimes types too fast and eats keystrokes. Other than that it’s flawless. Can recommend to anyone.
Can you not configure the text speed?
The single best way to insert emojis into text, I cannot function without this tool
What are some interesting use cases people are using Espanso for?
I use it to shorten common requests I have for my colleagues, e.g. to not forget their code reviews, or alias phrases I commonly use to a :command. It's handy as a form filler too.
I've seen people using it to insert emojis, lorem ipsum text, or fixing common typos. It's quite powerful because you can even do HTTP requests and mash them with your text.
There is Expanso Hub here, it contains numerous other examples: https://hub.espanso.org/
I'm now thinking about writing an expansion to help me reference tickets, e.g. expand :searchticket <string> to a list of up to 5 URLs. Since it happens inline, I don't have to "submit" the list to anything/anyone until I've cleaned up the message.
I’ve been using this for about 6 months. Love it.
I found it really buggy when I used it to the point in was unusable
Can anyone recommend a good TextExpander to Espanso snippet converter?
I used ChatGPT for that and it worked fine, you can even take screenshots and tell it to create the YAML config file for you
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