Always upvote a river in the void…
Always upvote a river in the void…
I use riverwm on my private laptop, which I don’t use regularly. My biggest problem is its departure from ordinary WMs way of starting itself. I think this causes quite some issues with dbus sessions etc. which are troublesome to fix.
What prompt is this?
ooh I am sorry then. ^^;
Bottom screenshot good example of why twm is not useful in this usecase. Also due to exaggerated use of gaps you are wasting screenspace, which is the opposite of what a twm actually is trying to do.
Vesktop seems interesting, going to check it out, thanks for mentioning.
I use Hyprland with mouse without any problems.
I see your problem :D (don’t take my remarks too personal, please)
The first picture is a non floating window? Kind of perfect example of why tiling wms are not suitable for everyone. :D
Why is the picture so small? I really want getting into riverwm, but the tags system feels very weird to me, aka I still struggle to understand it completely, why yambar instead of waybar?
gnome… minimalist
🤔
there is no reason to use something else as an enduser. Maybe as a backup or testing setup you could install something else, but apart from that…
Everforest is second best to my favorite kanagawa color theme. :D
Also interested in this. Does someone have info how up to date packages are in FreeBSD compared to linux distros? I imagine its not as bleeding edge as Arch? But also not as dusty as Debian?
Discord and youtube on Linux. Try Freetube at least. :P
Is that the default KDE bar? ugh I am dumb this is gnome…
Void linux?
Isn’t this actually impossible because manpages are maintained by distros? And the benefit of freedbsd being everything is created by the same team? Aka FreeBSD being a complete distro and not just a kernel?
Another WM? What differentiates swayfx from hyprland? Also why do you call it compositor, when it actually seems to be a sway fork?
Thanks for the video. If I understand this correctly, the way you tiled your desktop is saved, aka having on big window left and two horizontal tiled windows on the right. But where the windows are placed is determined by which window you open first? aka first window being left, then top right and after that bottom right?
I mean, can you provide a video of what you do when booting? Because to my knowledge the way you tile your desktops is not even saved between sessions? This is not what tiling is supposed to be in my book, its more hassle than benefit. But after 10 years of KDE use on my home desktop, I am also quite fed up with most of it. Windows rules disappearing/being deleted/renamed for now reason is just another reason.
Hosted on sourceforge…points gun at own temple