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Why you'd want a TILING WINDOW MANAGER, and why I DON'T


This entry was edited (10 months ago)

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in reply to The Linux Experiment

#e16
in reply to The Linux Experiment

@The Linux Experiment Windows also has some tiling capabilities, even some default keyboard shortcuts (that cannot be changed though).

In the ideal word, you'd have apps that wouldn't need to integrate with anything. Everything could be fitted the way you'd like: A window manager, a dock, an email client, a web browser, a text editor, a terminal etc. - just mix/match any of these according to your tastes. But I agree, there's a hell of a lot of stuff that can be accomplished by using the integrated experience of the DE of your choice.

in reply to Cătă

to expand upon the Windows tiling point, there's an optional MS add-on utility you can install that enables additional tiling features that function in the same way as #KDE Plasma's new (v5.27) tiling interface -- it's called FancyZones, part of the Powertools suite: learn.microsoft.com/en-us/wind…

(...and this Windows utility existed way before Plasma 5.27. I wouldn't be surprised if the Plasma tiling interface was inspired by FancyZones!)

in reply to R3.L5.R3

@R3.L5.R3 Oh, yes. Forgot about PowerToys. Really useful.

The KDE team might have stolen the idea from Windows, or, as @The Linux Experiment mentions, they just got inspired from the tiling window managers to create such an environment.

Unknown parent

eshep
I don't use any WM, & have no desire to


You sure bout that? How does your KDEPlasma session handle window placement, movement, resize...etc?

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eshep
Yes, I did know exactly what you meant when I wrote that. I couldn't resist that evil little pedant inside me though. 😆🤘