Linux Mint Keyboard Shortcuts: Complete List for Every User (2026)
Linux Mint keyboard shortcuts are key combinations that let you perform system actions opening the terminal, switching workspaces, taking screenshots, and more without touching the mouse. They work across Linux Mint’s desktop environments, including Cinnamon, XFCE, and MATE.
Whether you just switched from Windows or have been using Linux Mint for years, knowing the right keyboard shortcuts can cut the time you spend on repetitive tasks dramatically.
This guide covers every default shortcut built into Linux Mint from general system commands and the Nemo file manager to terminal controls, window management, and screenshot tools. If you’re coming from Windows, you’ll find most shortcuts familiar: Ctrl+C still copies, Ctrl+V still pastes, and the Super key (Windows key) still opens the application menu.
Before diving in, here are the 5 shortcuts every Linux Mint user should memorize first:
| Shortcut | Action |
|---|---|
| Ctrl + Alt + T | Open terminal |
| Super | Open application menu |
| Ctrl + Alt + L | Lock screen |
| Alt + Tab | Switch between open windows |
| Print Screen | Take a screenshot |
You can also download the complete Linux Mint shortcuts PDF at the bottom of this page useful for printing or keeping as a desktop reference.
General System Shortcuts
These shortcuts work system-wide across all applications in Linux Mint’s Cinnamon desktop environment.
| Action | Shortcut |
|---|---|
| Open the application menu | Super |
| Show desktop | Super + D |
| Open file manager (Nemo) | Super + E |
| Open the run dialogue | Alt + F2 |
| Open run dialogue (alternative) | Alt + F12 |
| Open a terminal | Ctrl + Alt + T |
| Undo | Ctrl + Z |
| Redo | Ctrl + Y |
| Copy selected item | Ctrl + C |
| Paste | Ctrl + V |
| Cut selected item | Ctrl + X |
| Select all | Ctrl + A |
| Save | Ctrl + S |
| Save as | Ctrl + Shift + S |
| Open file | Ctrl + O |
| Ctrl + P | |
| Find | Ctrl + F |
| Find and replace | Ctrl + H |
| New window or document | Ctrl + N |
| Close window or tab | Ctrl + W |
| Quit application | Ctrl + Q |
| Switch input method | Super + Space |
| Open system settings | Super + I |
| Re-detect display devices | Super + P |
| Toggle looking glass debug tool | Super + L |
| Open task manager | Ctrl + Alt + Delete (opens logout) |
| Zoom in (accessibility) | Super + = |
| Zoom out (accessibility) | Super + – |
Nemo File Manager Shortcuts
These shortcuts work inside the Nemo file manager, which is the default file manager in Linux Mint Cinnamon.
| Action | Shortcut |
|---|---|
| New folder | Ctrl + Shift + N |
| New window | Ctrl + N |
| New tab | Ctrl + T |
| Close tab | Ctrl + W |
| Close all windows | Ctrl + Q |
| Focus on location bar | Ctrl + L |
| Navigate to home directory | Alt + Home |
| Navigate up one directory | Alt + Up Arrow |
| Navigate one directory forward | Alt + Right Arrow |
| Navigate one directory back | Alt + Left Arrow |
| Select all items | Ctrl + A |
| Invert selection | Ctrl + Shift + I |
| Open selected item | Ctrl + O |
| Open selected item in new tab | Ctrl + Shift + O |
| Properties of selected item | Alt + Enter |
| Preview selected item | Shift + Enter |
| Rename selected item | F2 |
| Create shortcut to selected item | Ctrl + M |
| Delete selected item | Delete |
| Permanently delete selected item | Shift + Delete |
| Copy selected item | Ctrl + C |
| Cut selected item | Ctrl + X |
| Paste | Ctrl + V |
| Undo | Ctrl + Z |
| Redo | Ctrl + Shift + Z |
| Icon view | Ctrl + 1 |
| List view | Ctrl + 2 |
| Compact view | Ctrl + 3 |
| Show hidden files | Ctrl + H |
| Increase icon size | Ctrl + = |
| Decrease icon size | Ctrl + – |
| Reset icon size | Ctrl + 0 |
| Toggle extra pane | F3 |
| Toggle terminal in top pane | F4 |
| Toggle left pane | F9 |
| Edit bookmarks | Ctrl + B |
| Add bookmark | Ctrl + D |
| Cycle focus between panes | F6 |
| Switch to tab 1–9 | Alt + 1–9 |
| Next tab | Ctrl + Page Up |
| Previous tab | Ctrl + Page Down |
| Move tab left | Ctrl + Shift + Page Up |
| Move tab right | Ctrl + Shift + Page Down |
| Find | Ctrl + F |
| Open file menu | F10 |
| Open plugin manager | Alt + P |
| Refresh view | Ctrl + R or F5 |
| Open in terminal | F4 |
| Connect to server | Ctrl + K |
Window & Workspace Management Shortcuts
These shortcuts control window positioning, sizing, and workspace switching in the Cinnamon desktop environment.
| Action | Shortcut |
|---|---|
| Cycle through open windows | Alt + Tab |
| Cycle through windows in reverse | Alt + Shift + Tab |
| Cycle through windows of same app | Alt + ` |
| Toggle scale view | Ctrl + Alt + Down Arrow |
| Toggle expo view | Ctrl + Alt + Up Arrow |
| Move to left workspace | Ctrl + Alt + Left Arrow |
| Move to right workspace | Ctrl + Alt + Right Arrow |
| Move current window to left workspace | Ctrl + Alt + Shift + Left Arrow |
| Move current window to right workspace | Ctrl + Alt + Shift + Right Arrow |
| Maximize window | Super + Up Arrow |
| Unmaximize window | Super + Down Arrow |
| Tile window to left half | Super + Left Arrow |
| Tile window to right half | Super + Right Arrow |
| Move window to left monitor | Shift + Super + Left Arrow |
| Move window to right monitor | Shift + Super + Right Arrow |
| Show all windows (scale) | Ctrl + Alt + Down Arrow |
| Show all workspaces (expo) | Ctrl + Alt + Up Arrow |
| Switch to workspace 1 | Super + 1 |
| Switch to workspace 2 | Super + 2 |
| Switch to workspace 3 | Super + 3 |
| Switch to workspace 4 | Super + 4 |
Current Application Window Shortcuts
These shortcuts control the active application window directly.
| Action | Shortcut |
|---|---|
| Close window | Alt + F4 |
| Unmaximize window | Alt + F5 |
| Minimize window | Alt + F9 |
| Maximize window | Alt + F10 |
| Resize window | Alt + F8 |
| Move window | Alt + F7 |
| Toggle maximize or unmaximize | Alt + F10 |
| Open window menu | Alt + Spacebar |
| Always on top toggle | Alt + F12 |
| Roll up / shade window | Alt + F11 |
| Move window (mouse drag alternative) | Super + Left Click + Drag |
| Resize window (mouse drag alternative) | Super + Right Click + Drag |
Screenshots & Screen Recording Shortcuts
These shortcuts capture your screen or record your desktop in Linux Mint.
| Action | Shortcut |
|---|---|
| Take full screenshot | Print Screen |
| Take screenshot of current window | Alt + Print Screen |
| Take screenshot of selected area | Shift + Print Screen |
| Copy full screenshot to clipboard | Ctrl + Print Screen |
| Copy window screenshot to clipboard | Ctrl + Alt + Print Screen |
| Copy area screenshot to clipboard | Ctrl + Shift + Print Screen |
| Toggle desktop recording | Ctrl + Alt + Shift + R |
Lock Screen, Logout & System Shortcuts
These shortcuts control system-level actions including locking, logging out, and restarting the Cinnamon desktop.
| Action | Shortcut |
|---|---|
| Lock screen | Ctrl + Alt + L |
| Log out | Ctrl + Alt + Delete |
| Open shut down menu | Ctrl + Alt + End |
| Restart Cinnamon (without logging out) | Ctrl + Alt + Esc |
| Restart the X server | Ctrl + Alt + Backspace |
| Re-detect display devices | Super + P |
| Toggle looking glass debugging tool | Super + L |
| Launch Linux Mint online help | F1 |
| Switch to virtual terminal 1 | Ctrl + Alt + F1 |
| Switch to virtual terminal 2 | Ctrl + Alt + F2 |
| Switch to virtual terminal 3 | Ctrl + Alt + F3 |
| Switch to virtual terminal 4 | Ctrl + Alt + F4 |
| Switch to virtual terminal 5 | Ctrl + Alt + F5 |
| Switch to virtual terminal 6 | Ctrl + Alt + F6 |
| Return to graphical desktop | Ctrl + Alt + F7 |
Terminal Window Shortcuts
These shortcuts control the terminal emulator window itself tabs, zoom, copy/paste, and display. They work in the default Linux Mint terminal, MATE Terminal, Tilix, and Xterm.
| Action | Shortcut |
|---|---|
| Open new terminal window | Ctrl + Shift + N |
| Open new terminal tab | Ctrl + Shift + T |
| Close current tab | Ctrl + Shift + W |
| Close terminal window | Ctrl + Shift + Q |
| Switch to next tab | Ctrl + Page Down |
| Switch to previous tab | Ctrl + Page Up |
| Switch to tab 1 | Alt + 1 |
| Switch to tab 2 | Alt + 2 |
| Switch to tab 3 | Alt + 3 |
| Switch to tab 4 | Alt + 4 |
| Switch to tab 5 | Alt + 5 |
| Switch to tab 6 | Alt + 6 |
| Switch to tab 7 | Alt + 7 |
| Switch to tab 8 | Alt + 8 |
| Switch to tab 9 | Alt + 9 |
| Move tab left | Ctrl + Shift + Page Up |
| Move tab right | Ctrl + Shift + Page Down |
| Toggle fullscreen | F11 |
| Zoom in (increase font size) | Ctrl + + |
| Zoom out (decrease font size) | Ctrl + – |
| Reset zoom to default | Ctrl + 0 |
| Copy selected text | Ctrl + Shift + C |
| Paste text | Ctrl + Shift + V |
| Search terminal output | Ctrl + Shift + F |
| Clear terminal screen | Ctrl + L |
| Open terminal preferences | Ctrl + Shift + P |
| Scroll up one line | Shift + Up Arrow |
| Scroll down one line | Shift + Down Arrow |
| Scroll up one page | Shift + Page Up |
| Scroll down one page | Shift + Page Down |
| Move to top of buffer | Shift + Ctrl + Home |
| Move to bottom of buffer | Shift + Ctrl + End |
Terminal Cursor Movement Shortcuts
These shortcuts move your cursor within the current command line without using the arrow keys.
| Action | Shortcut |
|---|---|
| Move to beginning of line | Ctrl + A |
| Move to end of line | Ctrl + E |
| Move one character forward | Ctrl + F |
| Move one character backward | Ctrl + B |
| Move one word forward | Alt + F |
| Move one word backward | Alt + B |
Terminal Text Editing Shortcuts
These shortcuts let you edit commands directly on the command line without a mouse.
| Action | Shortcut |
|---|---|
| Delete character under cursor | Ctrl + D |
| Delete character before cursor | Ctrl + H or Backspace |
| Delete word before cursor | Ctrl + W |
| Delete word after cursor | Alt + D |
| Delete from cursor to end of line | Ctrl + K |
| Delete from cursor to beginning of line | Ctrl + U |
| Delete entire line | Ctrl + U then Ctrl + K |
| Swap current character with previous | Ctrl + T |
| Swap current word with previous | Alt + T |
| Convert word to UPPERCASE | Alt + U |
| Convert word to lowercase | Alt + L |
| Capitalize current word | Alt + C |
| Undo last text edit | Ctrl + _ |
| Yank (paste) last deleted text | Ctrl + Y |
| Yank last argument of previous command | Alt + . or Alt + _ |
Terminal Command History Shortcuts
These shortcuts let you recall, search, and reuse previously run commands in your Bash history.
| Action | Shortcut |
|---|---|
| Previous command | Up Arrow or Ctrl + P |
| Next command | Down Arrow or Ctrl + N |
| Search history backward | Ctrl + R |
| Search history forward | Ctrl + S |
| Cancel history search | Ctrl + G |
| Execute current history search result | Enter |
| Go to first command in history | Alt + < |
| Go to last command in history | Alt + > |
| Show last argument of previous command | Alt + . |
| Show full history list | history (command) |
| Run command number N from history | !N (command) |
| Run last command starting with string | !string (command) |
| Run last command again | !! (command) |
| Run last command as sudo | sudo !! (command) |
| Delete specific history entry | history -d N (command) |
| Clear all command history | history -c (command) |
| Expand history substitution preview | Alt + ^ |
Terminal Process Control Shortcuts
These shortcuts manage running processes directly from the terminal.
| Action | Shortcut |
|---|---|
| Interrupt / cancel running command | Ctrl + C |
| Pause (suspend) running process | Ctrl + Z |
| Resume paused process in foreground | fg (command) |
| Resume paused process in background | bg (command) |
| Exit terminal / end current session | Ctrl + D |
| Kill terminal session forcefully | Ctrl + \ |
| Suspend output scrolling to screen | Ctrl + S |
| Resume suspended output | Ctrl + Q |
| List all running background jobs | jobs (command) |
| Kill job number N | kill %N (command) |
Bash Auto-Complete Shortcuts
These shortcuts speed up command entry using Bash’s built-in auto-completion system.
| Action | Shortcut |
|---|---|
| Auto-complete command or filename | Tab |
| Show all possible completions | Tab + Tab |
| Auto-complete username | ~ + Tab |
| Auto-complete hostname | @ + Tab |
| Auto-complete variable name | $ + Tab |
| Expand glob pattern | Alt + * |
| Insert all completions into line | Alt + * |
| Auto-complete from history | Ctrl + R then type |
Nano Text Editor Shortcuts
Nano is the default command-line text editor in Linux Mint. Open any file with: nano filename
| Action | Shortcut |
|---|---|
| Save file | Ctrl + O |
| Exit Nano | Ctrl + X |
| Cut current line | Ctrl + K |
| Paste cut text | Ctrl + U |
| Copy current line | Alt + 6 |
| Search text | Ctrl + W |
| Search and replace | Ctrl + \ |
| Go to specific line number | Ctrl + _ |
| Move to beginning of file | Ctrl + Home or Alt + \ |
| Move to end of file | Ctrl + End or Alt + / |
| Select text (mark) | Ctrl + ^ or Alt + A |
| Undo | Alt + U |
| Redo | Alt + E |
| Show cursor position | Ctrl + C |
| Indent selected lines | Alt + } |
| Unindent selected lines | Alt + { |
| Toggle line numbers | Alt + N |
| Toggle soft wrapping | Alt + L |
| Move to next word | Ctrl + Right Arrow |
| Move to previous word | Ctrl + Left Arrow |
| Delete word forward | Ctrl + Delete |
| Delete word backward | Ctrl + Backspace |
| Open help | Ctrl + G |
Vim / Vi Text Editor Shortcuts
Vim has two primary modes: Normal mode (navigation and commands) and Insert mode (typing text). Press i to enter Insert mode. Press Esc to return to Normal mode.
Modes & File Operations
| Action | Shortcut |
|---|---|
| Enter Insert mode | i |
| Enter Insert mode at end of line | A |
| Enter Insert mode on new line below | o |
| Enter Insert mode on new line above | O |
| Return to Normal mode | Esc |
| Save file | :w then Enter |
| Save and exit | :wq then Enter or ZZ |
| Exit without saving | :q! then Enter |
| Save as new filename | :w filename then Enter |
| Open new file | :e filename |
| Split window horizontally | :sp filename |
| Split window vertically | :vsp filename |
| Switch between split windows | Ctrl + W + W |
Navigation
| Action | Shortcut |
|---|---|
| Move left | h |
| Move right | l |
| Move up | k |
| Move down | j |
| Move to beginning of line | 0 |
| Move to end of line | $ |
| Move to first line of file | gg |
| Move to last line of file | G |
| Move to specific line number N | :N then Enter |
| Move forward one word | w |
| Move backward one word | b |
| Move forward one paragraph | } |
| Move backward one paragraph | { |
Editing
| Action | Shortcut |
|---|---|
| Delete current line | dd |
| Delete word | dw |
| Delete character | x |
| Copy (yank) current line | yy |
| Copy word | yw |
| Paste after cursor | p |
| Paste before cursor | P |
| Undo | u |
| Redo | Ctrl + R |
| Indent line | >> |
| Unindent line | << |
| Select all | ggVG |
| Visual mode (select text) | v |
| Visual line mode | V |
| Visual block mode | Ctrl + V |
Search & Replace
| Action | Shortcut |
|---|---|
| Search forward | / then search term + Enter |
| Search backward | ? then search term + Enter |
| Next search result | n |
| Previous search result | N |
| Find and replace all | :%s/old/new/g then Enter |
Display
| Action | Shortcut |
|---|---|
| Toggle line numbers | :set number |
| Show current file info | Ctrl + G |
Tmux Shortcuts
All Tmux shortcuts use the prefix key Ctrl + B first. Press Ctrl + B, release, then press the second key. Install with: sudo apt install tmux
Sessions & Windows
| Action | Shortcut |
|---|---|
| Start new session | tmux (command) |
| Start named session | tmux new -s name (command) |
| Attach to last session | tmux attach (command) |
| Attach to named session | tmux attach -t name (command) |
| List all sessions | Ctrl + B then S |
| Rename current session | Ctrl + B then $ |
| Detach from session | Ctrl + B then D |
| Kill current session | Ctrl + B then : then kill-session |
| New window | Ctrl + B then C |
| Close current window | Ctrl + B then & |
| Rename current window | Ctrl + B then , |
| Switch to next window | Ctrl + B then N |
| Switch to previous window | Ctrl + B then P |
| Switch to window by number | Ctrl + B then 0–9 |
| List all windows | Ctrl + B then W |
| Find window by name | Ctrl + B then F |
Panes
| Action | Shortcut |
|---|---|
| Split pane horizontally | Ctrl + B then “ |
| Split pane vertically | Ctrl + B then % |
| Switch to next pane | Ctrl + B then O |
| Switch pane by direction | Ctrl + B then Arrow key |
| Swap pane with next | Ctrl + B then } |
| Swap pane with previous | Ctrl + B then { |
| Close current pane | Ctrl + B then X |
| Convert pane to window | Ctrl + B then ! |
| Resize pane down | Ctrl + B then Ctrl + Down |
| Resize pane up | Ctrl + B then Ctrl + Up |
| Resize pane left | Ctrl + B then Ctrl + Left |
| Resize pane right | Ctrl + B then Ctrl + Right |
| Toggle pane zoom fullscreen | Ctrl + B then Z |
| Show pane numbers | Ctrl + B then Q |
| Jump to pane by number | Ctrl + B then Q then 0–9 |
Copy Mode
| Action | Shortcut |
|---|---|
| Enter copy mode | Ctrl + B then [ |
| Exit copy mode | Q or Esc |
| Start selection | Space |
| Copy selection | Enter |
| Paste copied text | Ctrl + B then ] |
| Search forward | / |
| Search backward | ? |
| Move to top of buffer | G |
| Move to bottom of buffer | g |
Miscellaneous
| Action | Shortcut |
|---|---|
| Enter command mode | Ctrl + B then : |
| Show all key bindings | Ctrl + B then ? |
| Refresh client | Ctrl + B then R |
| Clock mode | Ctrl + B then T |
SSH Shortcuts
These shortcuts work during active SSH sessions in the terminal.
| Action | Shortcut |
|---|---|
| Connect to remote server | ssh user@hostname (command) |
| Disconnect from SSH session | exit or Ctrl + D |
| Force disconnect (escape sequence) | Enter then ~ then . |
| Suspend SSH session | Enter then ~ then Ctrl + Z |
| List SSH escape sequences | Enter then ~ then ? |
| Background SSH session | Enter then ~ then & |
| Open new SSH tunnel | Enter then ~ then C |
Tilix Terminal Shortcuts
Tilix is a popular tiling terminal emulator available in Linux Mint. Install with: sudo apt install tilix
| Action | Shortcut |
|---|---|
| New terminal session | Ctrl + Alt + T |
| Split terminal horizontally | Ctrl + Alt + S |
| Split terminal vertically | Ctrl + Alt + D |
| Close terminal | Ctrl + Alt + W |
| Switch to next terminal | Alt + Down Arrow |
| Switch to previous terminal | Alt + Up Arrow |
| Switch terminal by number | Alt + 1–9 |
| Zoom in | Ctrl + + |
| Zoom out | Ctrl + – |
| Toggle sidebar | Ctrl + Alt + F |
| Find in terminal | Ctrl + Shift + F |
| Synchronize input across terminals | Ctrl + Alt + I |
MATE Terminal Shortcuts
MATE Terminal is the default terminal in Linux Mint MATE edition.
| Action | Shortcut |
|---|---|
| New tab | Ctrl + Shift + T |
| New window | Ctrl + Shift + N |
| Close tab | Ctrl + Shift + W |
| Next tab | Ctrl + Page Down |
| Previous tab | Ctrl + Page Up |
| Copy | Ctrl + Shift + C |
| Paste | Ctrl + Shift + V |
| Full screen | F11 |
| Zoom in | Ctrl + + |
| Zoom out | Ctrl + – |
| Reset and clear | Ctrl + Shift + J |
| Open preferences | Ctrl + Shift + P |
Xterm Shortcuts
Xterm is a lightweight terminal emulator available in Linux Mint.
| Action | Shortcut |
|---|---|
| Increase font size | Shift + Ctrl + + |
| Decrease font size | Shift + Ctrl + – |
| Copy selection | Ctrl + Shift + C |
| Paste | Ctrl + Shift + V |
| Toggle scroll bar | Shift + Ctrl + H |
| Scroll up | Shift + Page Up |
| Scroll down | Shift + Page Down |
📄 Download the Free Linux Mint Shortcuts PDF
Get the complete shortcuts reference as a printable PDF all categories, all shortcuts, one clean document.
How to Customize Keyboard Shortcuts in Linux Mint
Linux Mint lets you change any default shortcut and create entirely new ones no terminal required. Here is how to do it across all
three desktop environments.
How to Change Shortcuts in Cinnamon (Default Desktop)
Step 1: Open the Menu and search for “Keyboard,” then click Keyboard under System Settings.
Step 2: Click the Shortcuts tab at the top of the Keyboard window.
Step 3: You will see all shortcuts organised into categories on the left System, Launchers, Window Management, Workspaces,
Screenshots, and more. Click any category to expand it.
Step 4: Click the shortcut you want to change. The row will highlight and show “New accelerator…”
Step 5: Press your new key combination. It saves automatically. If the combination is already in use, Linux Mint will warn you before overwriting it.
Step 6: To remove a shortcut entirely, click the shortcut row and press Backspace.
How to Add a Custom Keyboard Shortcut in Cinnamon
Step 1: Go to Menu → System Settings → Keyboard → Shortcuts.
Step 2: Scroll to the very bottom of the shortcut list and click “Add custom shortcut.”
Step 3: Enter a name for your shortcut (e.g. “Open Firefox”).
Step 4: Enter the command to run (e.g. firefox). Common commands:
— Open Files app: nemo
— Open Firefox: firefox
— Open Text Editor: xed
— Open Calculator: gnome-calculator
— Run a script: /home/yourname/scripts/myscript.sh
Step 5: Click the “unassigned” button next to your new shortcut and press your desired key combination.
Step 6: Click Add. Your custom shortcut is now active system-wide.
How to Change Shortcuts in XFCE (Linux Mint XFCE Edition)
Step 1: Go to Menu → Settings → Settings Manager.
Step 2: Click Keyboard, then select the Application Shortcuts tab.
Step 3: To edit an existing shortcut, double-click it and press your new key combination.
Step 4: To add a new shortcut, click the Add button, enter the command, then press the key combination when prompted.
Step 5: To remove a shortcut, select it and click Remove.
Note: Window manager shortcuts (tiling, workspace switching) are managed separately under Settings → Window Manager → Keyboard.
How to Change Shortcuts in MATE (Linux Mint MATE Edition)
Step 1: Go to Menu → System → Preferences → Hardware → Keyboard Shortcuts.
Step 2: Click the shortcut you want to change. The Action column will show “New shortcut…”
Step 3: Press your new key combination. It saves automatically.
Step 4: To clear a shortcut, press Backspace while the row is selected.
Note: Custom shortcuts in MATE are managed under Menu → System → Preferences → Hardware → Keyboard Shortcuts → scroll to the Custom Shortcuts section at the bottom.
Frequently Asked Questions About Linux Mint Keyboard Shortcuts
How do I open the terminal in Linux Mint?
Press Ctrl + Alt + T to open the terminal instantly from anywhere on the desktop. This works by default in the Cinnamon desktop environment. If the shortcut isn’t working, go to Menu → System Settings → Keyboard → Shortcuts → Launchers and confirm it is assigned to your terminal emulator.
What does Ctrl + Alt + Delete do in Linux Mint?
Unlike Windows where Ctrl + Alt + Delete opens the Task Manager, in Linux Mint it logs you out of your current session. If you want to force-quit a frozen application instead, use the Nemo file manager’s built-in process viewer or open the terminal and run the xkill command.
How do I lock my screen in Linux Mint?
Press Ctrl + Alt + L to lock your screen immediately. This is the fastest way to secure your session when stepping away. You can also customise this shortcut in System Settings → Keyboard → Shortcuts → System.
How do I take a screenshot in Linux Mint?
Press Print Screen to capture the full screen. Use Alt + Print Screen to capture only the active window, or Ctrl + Print Screen to copy a screenshot directly to your clipboard without saving a file. Screenshots are saved to your Pictures folder by default.
How do I customize keyboard shortcuts in Linux Mint?
Go to Menu → System Settings → Keyboard → Shortcuts. You’ll see all default shortcuts organised by category System, Launchers, Window Management, and more. Click any shortcut and press your desired key combination to reassign it. To create a brand new custom shortcut, scroll to the bottom of the list and click the Add Custom Shortcut button, then enter a name, the command to run, and your chosen key combination.
What is the Super key in Linux Mint?
The Super key is the Windows key on most keyboards. In Linux Mint’s Cinnamon desktop, pressing it alone opens the application menu the same way the Start button works in Windows. It is also used as a modifier key in several shortcuts, such as Super + D to show the desktop and Super + E to open the Nemo file manager.
Are Linux Mint shortcuts the same as Ubuntu shortcuts?
Many shortcuts overlap because both Linux Mint and Ubuntu are Debian-based and share common applications like the terminal and file manager. However, Linux Mint uses the Cinnamon desktop environment by default, while Ubuntu uses GNOME so window management and workspace shortcuts differ. For example, Cinnamon uses Ctrl + Alt + Arrow keys to switch workspaces, while GNOME uses Super + Page Up / Page Down.
Can I download a Linux Mint shortcuts PDF?
Yes. A free printable PDF of all Linux Mint keyboard shortcuts is available at the above of this page. It covers all categories in this guide system shortcuts, Nemo file manager, window management, screenshots, and more formatted for easy printing or use as a desktop reference.
Final Thoughts
Keyboard shortcuts are one of the smallest changes you can make to your workflow with one of the biggest payoffs. You do not need to memorize all 300+ shortcuts on this page at once nobody does. The best approach is to pick 5 shortcuts you do not currently use, practice them for one week until they become automatic, then add 5 more.
If you are switching from Windows, start with the 4 key differences covered in the comparison table above. If you are a long-time Linux Mint user, the terminal shortcuts especially the Bash history search with Ctrl + R and the cursor movement shortcuts are where most people find the biggest productivity gains.
Linux Mint’s Cinnamon desktop is one of the most keyboard-friendly environments in the Linux world. Every shortcut on this page is customizable if any combination does not feel natural, head to System Settings → Keyboard → Shortcuts and make it yours.
Download the free PDF above to keep this reference handy without needing to return to this page every time.
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