I did some more work on porting xiate to GTK 4. Some things are just gone from GTK 4. Like, there is no abstraction around XSetClassHint() anymore. You have to fall back to using raw XLib functions, which comes with a bunch of ifdefs and runtime checks. (The new way appears to be setting an "app ID" using g_set_prgname(). This isn't backwards compatible, because it is only *one* string, not *two* as in XSetClassHint().) Wayland has no concept of an "urgency hint" but there's [XDG activation]. Sadly, that's not really the same thing as it talks about transferring focus. In Sway, it has the same effect as X11's urgency hint, but what do other compositors do? (Some others I tried don't even support that protocol.) [XDG activation]: https://wayland.app/protocols/xdg-activation-v1 Then ... even with `GSK_RENDERER=cairo`, startup times are considerably slower with GTK 4 than with GTK 3. It's very noticeable. And finally, one terminal window now needs about 175 MB of RAM with GTK 4. With GTK 3, it's about 40 MB. (I was already complaining about the memory footprint of the GTK 3 version back in 2017, but eventually gave up and accepted it.) What's more, a simple empty GTK 4 window already weighs in at 160 MB. I'm not sure if I like this. Staying on GTK 3 is not an option, because it does not support XDG activation on Wayland. (And eventually, it will die.) Now what? Does xiate have a future? Should I just use on the of the other Wayland terminal emulators, like [foot], when I eventually switch to Wayland? [foot]: https://codeberg.org/dnkl/foot