forge
bismuth
Our great sponsors
forge | bismuth | |
---|---|---|
12 | 138 | |
300 | 2,342 | |
- | 3.4% | |
7.8 | 0.0 | |
12 months ago | 2 months ago | |
JavaScript | TypeScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
forge
- Popshell on Fedora 38
- do any tiling extensions work on Gnome 44?
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My First Rice on Fedora with Catppuccin + Forge :D
i used force extension for that, since it supports gnome 43 and modified colors to make sure it looks good with catppuccin
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What tiling window manager are you using and why?
For gnome autotiling you can look at forge or pop-shell.
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Pop_OS! window tiling on EndeavourOS
There is another alternative: Forge
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Pop OS Tiling on Gnome?
On github
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dragging a window near to top edge reveals the snap layouts; that would be a really really nice tiling for GNOME!!!
For tiling i'm using with: Forge. https://github.com/jmmaranan/forge
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Forge: By far the best tiling extention for the Gnome desktop
I tested the Forge extention https://github.com/jmmaranan/forge in Gnome 3.36 on Linux mint.
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Awesome GNOME-Shell extensions you did not know about...
I didn't know about Forge until it appears in a recent comment on this sub, this extension implements a fully featured tiling wm into Gnome.
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is Pop-shell the only option for tiling wm in gnome?
Try: Forge
bismuth
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Cosmic Desktop: Hammering Out New Cosmic Features
What level are you interested in scripting? In KDE Plasma you can interact with the desktop UI via JS: https://develop.kde.org/docs/plasma/scripting/
And then for something more sophisticated there are extensions like https://github.com/Bismuth-Forge/bismuth.
It does all feel a little disorganized/wild-west-y compared to say, a .vimrc with a list of plugins and bindings, which is something that makes a system like Nix (or a fully containerized DE of some kind) appealing
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Hyprland Crash Course
It had, but they are all dead until ported to the new kde 6.
https://github.com/Bismuth-Forge/bismuth/issues/471#issuecom...
This is what I used. I found no good replacement for it and that is what made me switch to hyprland.
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This week in KDE: Double-click by default
one thing i would totally recommend for kde is bismuth https://github.com/Bismuth-Forge/bismuth/
it's tiling for kde and it works REALLY well.
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I find myself getting annoyed with having to set each window Up how I like it. So far this is a set up I enjoy when working on projects. How can I get Ubuntu to save this 'set up' so I can quickly open these apps in this view?
Take a look at a tiling window solution. I'm currently using bismuthwith gives similar arrangement to what you're looking for and helps massively with productivity when working on an ultrawide
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What is a good windows tiling manager for beginners?
As a good halfway house you could do worse than KDE with Bismuth (https://github.com/Bismuth-Forge/bismuth), which is an add-in that will give you great tiling capability, fully controllable via the keyboard. Couple this with KDE native virtual desktops and you have a pretty decent tiling window manager.
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Why KDE Plasma was chosen as the default desktop environment for Asahi Linux
Plasma 5.27 added in some native tiling support. There are also some kwin scripts available to add tiling to it.
https://github.com/Bismuth-Forge/bismuth
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I am a little concerned about Tiling on KDE 6
Not-good stuff: This tiling is very incomplete. It doesn't allow you to snap everything to your tiles at once, it doesn't support different tiles per virtual screen/workspace and, perhaps more importantly, with that addition and Plasma 6 on the way, compatibility with Bismuth and similar addons is getting lost.
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Trying to make a case for tiling WM.
Since you are already using KDE, you can very easily try how much you like tiling: just install bismuth: https://github.com/Bismuth-Forge/bismuth It's a plasma add-on that enables tiling in KDE. If you don't like tiling, just disable the plugin again and uninstall bismuth.
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A couple of questions regarding Bismuth tiling extension
No, it doesn't have that. Here is the list of layouts.
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Manjaro / KDE — hard to dislike
No I was talking about Bismuth which was amazing and actively maintained but due to kwin updates it's not working and is apparently not going to be updated
What are some alternatives?
Tiling-Assistant - An extension which adds a Windows-like snap assist to GNOME. It also expands GNOME's 2 column tiling layout.
krohnkite - A dynamic tiling extension for KWin
material-shell - A modern desktop interface for Linux. Improve your user experience and get rid of the anarchy of traditional desktop workflows. Designed to simplify navigation and reduce the need to manipulate windows in order to improve productivity. It's meant to be 100% predictable and bring the benefits of tools coveted by professionals to everyone.
i3-and-kde-plasma - How to install the i3 window manager on KDE
bing-wallpaper-gnome-extension - GNOME shell extension that syncs your desktop & lock screen wallpaper to Microsoft Bing's Image of the Day.
kwin-tiling - Tiling script for kwin
unite-shell - Unite is an extension that makes GNOME Shell look like Ubuntu Unity Shell.
Grid-Tiling-Kwin - A kwin script that automatically tiles windows
shell - Pop!_OS Shell
awesome-wayland - A curated list of Wayland code and resources.
emoji-selector-for-gnome - This extension provide a popup menu with some emojis ; clicking on an emoji copies it to the clipboard.
bspwm - A tiling window manager based on binary space partitioning