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i3ipc-python

An improved Python library to control i3wm and sway.

About

i3's interprocess communication (or ipc) is the interface i3wm uses to receive commands from client applications such as i3-msg. It also features a publish/subscribe mechanism for notifying interested parties of window manager events.

i3ipc-python is a Python library for controlling the window manager. This project is intended to be useful for general scripting, and for applications that interact with the window manager like status line generators, notification daemons, and window pagers.

If you have an idea for a script to extend i3wm, you can add your script to the examples folder.

For details on how to use the library, see the reference documentation.

Chat

Installation

i3ipc is on PyPI.

pip3 install i3ipc

Example

from i3ipc import Connection, Event

# Create the Connection object that can be used to send commands and subscribe
# to events.
i3 = Connection()

# Print the name of the focused window
focused = i3.get_tree().find_focused()
print('Focused window %s is on workspace %s' %
      (focused.name, focused.workspace().name))

# Query the ipc for outputs. The result is a list that represents the parsed
# reply of a command like `i3-msg -t get_outputs`.
outputs = i3.get_outputs()

print('Active outputs:')

for output in filter(lambda o: o.active, outputs):
    print(output.name)

# Send a command to be executed synchronously.
i3.command('focus left')

# Take all fullscreen windows out of fullscreen
for container in i3.get_tree().find_fullscreen():
    container.command('fullscreen')

# Print the names of all the containers in the tree
root = i3.get_tree()
print(root.name)
for con in root:
    print(con.name)

# Define a callback to be called when you switch workspaces.
def on_workspace_focus(self, e):
    # The first parameter is the connection to the ipc and the second is an object
    # with the data of the event sent from i3.
    if e.current:
        print('Windows on this workspace:')
        for w in e.current.leaves():
            print(w.name)

# Dynamically name your workspaces after the current window class
def on_window_focus(i3, e):
    focused = i3.get_tree().find_focused()
    ws_name = "%s:%s" % (focused.workspace().num, focused.window_class)
    i3.command('rename workspace to "%s"' % ws_name)

# Subscribe to events
i3.on(Event.WORKSPACE_FOCUS, on_workspace_focus)
i3.on(Event.WINDOW_FOCUS, on_window_focus)

# Start the main loop and wait for events to come in.
i3.main()

Asyncio Support

Support for asyncio is included in the i3ipc.aio package. The interface is similar to the blocking interface but the methods that interact with the socket are coroutines.

from i3ipc.aio import Connection
from i3ipc import Event

import asyncio

async def main():
    def on_window(self, e):
        print(e)

    c = await Connection(auto_reconnect=True).connect()

    workspaces = await c.get_workspaces()

    c.on(Event.WINDOW, on_window)

    await c.main()

asyncio.get_event_loop().run_until_complete(main())

Debug Logging

i3ipc-python uses the standard logging module under the i3ipc namespace.

import logging
logging.basicConfig(level=logging.DEBUG)

Contributing

Development happens on Github. Please feel free to report bugs, request features or add examples by submitting a pull request.

License

This work is available under a BSD-3-Clause license (see LICENSE).

Copyright © 2015, Tony Crisci

All rights reserved.