This is rather unrelated to snapd ... it is an old known issue with gnome-terminal that it captures F1 presses by default ...
http://www.cmdln.org/2010/12/28/quick-tip-disable-help-f1-in-gnome-terminal/ https://askubuntu.com/a/50250
One could argue that pulsemixer would be able to bundle its own terminal app (xterm ?) and wrap that into the app startup command due to being a snap, but that would be a bug against the pulsemixer snap, not against snapd ...
This is rather unrelated to snapd ... it is an old known issue with gnome-terminal that it captures F1 presses by default ...
http:// www.cmdln. org/2010/ 12/28/quick- tip-disable- help-f1- in-gnome- terminal/ /askubuntu. com/a/50250
https:/
One could argue that pulsemixer would be able to bundle its own terminal app (xterm ?) and wrap that into the app startup command due to being a snap, but that would be a bug against the pulsemixer snap, not against snapd ...