- cross-posted to:
- wayland
- linux@programming.dev
- hackernews@derp.foo
- cross-posted to:
- wayland
- linux@programming.dev
- hackernews@derp.foo
cross-posted from: https://programming.dev/post/9378922
v0.1 was released recently
cross-posted from: https://programming.dev/post/9378922
v0.1 was released recently
What are your thoughts on paperwm so far compared to more traditional tiling WMs?
I’m more of a Wayland person, so I’ve been thinking about trying out niri for a while now. I kinda like their nix flake and sloc-count (which make me think the dev(s) are pretty competent) and have used said flake as a reference for trying out a few other Wayland compositors written in rust on nixos so far, but the idea of scrollable tiling overall seems weird, so I’m hesitant to try it out myself rn :/
I use paperwm on Wayland gnome. If you like a scroll wm, is extremely easy to find out by installing the extension. It’s one click away. It might not be for everybody and has a few glitches, but fits my workflow better than other paradigms.
It tried out niri and found it identical to paperwm in most aspects. However, I like gnome and its features, so I missed those in niri. On the other hand niri didn’t bring me anything new. It is also difficult to install and configure and requires manual recompiling. I’ll certainly revisit it in a more advanced stage, should it reach such, but for now I’m perfectly fine with paperwm.