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qutebrowser quickstart

Note
This page will only appear on the first start. To view it at a later time, use the :help command.

Basic keybindings to get you started

  • Use the arrow keys or hjkl to move around a webpage (vim-like syntax is used in quite a few places)

  • To go to a new webpage, press o, then type a url, then press Enter (Use O to open the url in a new tab, go to edit the current URL)

  • If what you’ve typed isn’t a url, then a search engine will be used instead (DuckDuckGo, by default)

  • To switch between tabs, use J (next tab) and K (previous tab), or press <Alt-num>, where num is the position of the tab to switch to

  • To close the current tab, press d (and press u to undo closing a tab)

  • Use H and L to go back and forth in the history

  • To click on something without using the mouse, press f to show the hints, then type the keys next to what you want to click on (if that sounds weird, then just try pressing f and see what happens)

  • Press : to show the commandline

  • To search in a page, press /, type the phrase to search for, then press Enter. Use n and N to go back and forth through the matches, and press Esc to stop doing the search.

  • To close qutebrowser, press Alt-F4, or :q, or :wq to save the currently open tabs and quit (note that in the settings you can make qutebrowser always save the currently open tabs)

What to do now

  • View the key binding cheatsheet to make yourself familiar with the key bindings:
    qutebrowser key binding cheatsheet

  • There’s also a free training course on shortcutfoo for the keybindings - note that you need to be in insert mode (i) for it to work.

  • Run :adblock-update to download adblock lists and activate adblocking.

  • If you just cloned the repository, you’ll need to run scripts/asciidoc2html.py to generate the documentation.

  • Go to the settings page to set up qutebrowser the way you want it.

  • Subscribe to the mailinglist or the announce-only mailinglist.

  • Let me know what features you are missing or things that need (even small!) improvements.

Getting help

If you get stuck, you can get help in multiple ways:

Donating

Working on qutebrowser is a very rewarding hobby, but like (nearly) all hobbies it also costs some money. Namely I have to pay for the server and domain, and do occasional hardware upgrades [1].

If you want to give me a beer or a pizza back, I’m trying to make it as easy as possible for you to do so. If some other way would be easier for you, please get in touch!


1. It turned out a 160 GB SSD is rather small - the VMs and custom Qt builds I use for testing/developing qutebrowser need about 100 GB of space