Post AUtpdKsRUVwsSFHYfY by brektyme@hachyderm.io
 (DIR) More posts by brektyme@hachyderm.io
 (DIR) Post #AUtpdKK3YMRWjbC64W by nixCraft@mastodon.social
       2023-04-22T04:03:54Z
       
       1 likes, 2 repeats
       
       Poll: Do you use "Tiling window manager" on your #Linux or #Unix/*BSD desktop?
       
 (DIR) Post #AUtpdKsRUVwsSFHYfY by brektyme@hachyderm.io
       2023-04-22T04:09:33Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @nixCraft I was turned off i3 when someone tried to show me how much more efficient it is by moving a window with their keyboard, thirty seconds later they had managed to move it. They had been using i3 for at least a year at that point.
       
 (DIR) Post #AUtpdLZKv2GAbHLoWm by 10leej@mstdn.starnix.network
       2023-04-22T04:53:26Z
       
       0 likes, 1 repeats
       
       @brektyme @nixCraft Sadly it's a shame that people think i3 is an example of every tiling window manager when it truth you should look at a dynamic tiling window manager unlike i3 which is a manual tiling window manager.
       
 (DIR) Post #AUttyGN5q0GsNWqxjk by swetland@chaos.social
       2023-04-22T05:42:01Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @10leej @brektyme @nixCraft Can you suggest some friendlier alternatives to take a look at?  I'd love to find some sweet spot between "being able to put stuff where I want it and have it stay that way, including multiple desktops and restoring sessions" and "having to learn a specialized configuration language in depth and/or memorize a bunch of keyboard combo moves"...
       
 (DIR) Post #AUuh6JFrtdpPOMwMca by 10leej@mstdn.starnix.network
       2023-04-22T14:52:34Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @swetland @brektyme @nixCraft So, the awesome window manager is actually pretty good, but uses Lua for configurations. You could look at bspwm. I personally prefer dwm