this post was submitted on 17 Dec 2023
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I only tried a tiling WM for a few days several years ago. I am ok using the terminal but not everything can be done easily there. In the screenshots of people setups, there are always fancy terminals. Are tiling WM good also for other GUI a part from terminals?

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[–] cerement@slrpnk.net 9 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) (3 children)
  • a big feature of tiling window managers is the auto-placement / auto-adjustment / auto-sizing of windows to fit available space
    • their main focus is always having everything visible (nothing hidden behind overlaps)
    • and most of them take advantage of having a good set of keybinds so everything can be keyboard driven rather than half-and-half with a mouse
  • before jumping feet first into tiling window managers, get an easy introduction with
    • Pop Shell – an extension that adds tiling features to Gnome
    • PaperWM adds linear tiling to Gnome
    • Material Shell – focusing on a more grid based workspace model
  • DistroTube argued that the killer feature of tiling window managers is the workspaces, not the tiling
  • check through the hotkeys of your current window manager – you won’t get the full dynamic features of a tiling window manager, but most of them have keys for snapping windows to top-half, bottom-half, left-half, right-half (as well as sometimes offering by quarter as well)
[–] linuxPIPEpower@discuss.tchncs.de 1 points 11 months ago

what's so special about workspaces in tiling wms compared to other options?

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