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It is common to have two equally separated windows by either dragging each window to one side of the screen or Ctrl+Super+/, but I want to divide my screen into four quarters.

I have encounterd many situations in which I had to switch windows between three or four. It would be sometimes easier to debug any code if I could have a screen with four equally divided windows so that I could see the entire system with one look.

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6 Answers 6

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It is possible, as you can see from this example with four gnome-terminal windows:

example

I did not manually resize and position the windows, which I could have done, but just dragged them into the corners of the screen to format them automatically. It's the same procedure as you described with placing a window into the left or right half by dragging it to the respective border of the screen. There are also custom keyboard short-cuts to achieve this.

You can set up whichever method you prefer or both.

However, the corners are by default configured the same way as the side borders and the short-cuts are probably disabled, so we have to change these settings.

Therefore we need the CompizConfig Settings Manager Install compizconfig-settings-manager.
You can also install it from the terminal with the command below:

sudo apt-get install compizconfig-settings-manager

After that, launch ccsm.

Navigate to the category Window Management and select the Grid plug-in. Go to the Corners / Edges tab and you should see the following settings:

ccsm > Grid > Corners/Edges

Set all corner options according to my example above, so that when you drag a window e.g. into the upper left corner, it will get resized and placed into the top left quarter of the screen.

You can also set up keyboard short-cuts to place windows into the grid. Switch to the Bindings tab and select the short-cut key combinations you prefer. I opted for Ctrl+Alt+NumPad 1-9 to put the windows into the respective screen halves or corners. See my example below:

ccsm > Grid > Bindings

All your changes take effect immediately, so just close the ccsm window.

Now you can start dragging windows into the corners:

example

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    Beautiful examples of commands run in the terminals Nov 25, 2015 at 9:57
  • this answer works when using compiz with xubuntu too. Dec 29, 2017 at 5:13
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    Doesn't work with gnome3 of 18.04
    – XChikuX
    May 12, 2018 at 6:03
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You can do this as well with the Unity Tweak Tool.

Install it with the terminal command below or by clicking here: unity-tweak-tool Install unity-tweak-tool

sudo apt-get install unity-tweak-tool -y

Once you installed this tool, open it and go to Window Snapping and then you can configure the window snapping on Ubuntu.

Unity tweak tool

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  • Why do you use the version from a PPA? unity-tweak-tool is also available from the universe repository. That version is probably more stable.
    – Byte Commander
    Nov 25, 2015 at 15:03
  • Yes, you're right. you can use that version too. Nov 26, 2015 at 17:55
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    @RahulRaj I do not know if there is a link that explains how to configure the windows snapping configuration, but I think it is a matter of choice for the setting it. for example , I like that when I drag a window to the top left corner , the window becomes 1/4 of the screen, and the same for the corners ( upper right , lower right , lower left ) , you can try play with the settings, it is not rocket science. You will learn faster if you try . Sorry for my english it's not my main language Nov 26, 2015 at 19:17
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    @RahulRaj to reset defaults on Unity launcher follow this tutorial also you can reset compiz settings to restore Ubuntu to default configuration Nov 27, 2015 at 16:56
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    @RahulRaj try this reset compiz & unity Nov 27, 2015 at 17:08
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Use ShellTile to get equally sized windows on Ubuntu 18.04.1 LTS (Bionic Beaver).

enter image description here

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All the described solutions do not work with Ubuntu 18 and up except ShellTile.

You can use the gTile gnome extension. This is my preferred solution which has more features. These are the default shortcuts:

gTile Keyboard Shortcuts

Read the github page for more shortcuts and settings.

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  • Thank you! I found this was the best option on newer versions of Ubuntu, feature rich and highly customizable. Also, out of the box there are 2 additional groups of pre-configured shortcuts using Super + Control + KP_[1-9] and Super + Shift + KP_[1-9] so you can do a lot without even changing any settings. Feb 8, 2021 at 22:22
  • thanks! +1000, maybe add to your answer that KP stands for KeyPad. Apr 6, 2022 at 6:51
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There is a little application called x-tile that can organize windows in several different ways, including the way you want (tile all quad). Make sure to manually install python-appindicator (missing depency -- filed a bug for it).

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enter image description here

The generic keyboard settings dialogue allows shortcuts to be set for view split on left or right.

Additional shortcuts can be added with the + button, although I do not know what the commands would be.

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