wingo
Hyprland
wingo | Hyprland | |
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7 | 130 | |
981 | 16,694 | |
- | 4.6% | |
0.0 | 9.9 | |
over 1 year ago | 2 days ago | |
Go | C++ | |
Do What The F*ck You Want To Public License | BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License |
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.
wingo
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Framework 13 with AMD Ryzen 7040 Series Makes for a Great Linux Laptop
I've been using X11 on my Framework laptop for years. No desktop environment at all. Just my regulard old school window manager[1]. No KDE or GNOME. But also no XFCE.
The only thing I had to do to get scaling working for me was set two environment variables[2].
I was indeed worried about this when I bought the laptop. Prior to this, I avoided anything with resolutions higher than 1920x1200. But it turned out that everything mostly worked with a couple tweaks.
I think the only real issue I've run into is `git gui`. As I understand it, the GUI toolkit it uses doesn't support scaling? Not sure. I ended up working around it by just increasing font sizes. I suppose this exposes the weakness that is probably impacting you: the scaling on my laptop is being done by the GUI toolkits, not the display server or compositor. (I don't always run a compositor, but when I do, I use `picom`. Mostly just to avoid tearing.)
[1]: https://github.com/BurntSushi/wingo
[2]: https://github.com/BurntSushi/dotfiles/blob/ea3a88e6160f4244...
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Zv/9Problems: A Tiling Window Manager for Plan9
I used Wingo (https://github.com/BurntSushi/wingo) for a while and it did the floating/tiling mix pretty well.
I also used StumpWM (https://stumpwm.github.io/) for years, primarily in purely-tiling mode. The killer feature for me was that you (the user) define frames on the desktop, and then windows are placed into frames rather than resizing and re-jiggering everything whenever a new window opens.
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This week in KDE: “More Wayland fixes”
Yeah I remember activities from over a decade ago. I don't recall ever being able to get it to work right.
I ended up writing my own WM instead: https://github.com/BurntSushi/wingo
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Tauri reached 1.0
That's why I went and wrote my own window manager that breaks this aspect of EWMH so that workspaces can be changed independently on each head: https://github.com/BurntSushi/wingo/
- Rust Moderation Team Resigns
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What DE/WM are using ?
Wingo
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Feature Request: What are the most important features for you?
Switching to a desktop environment is a no-go for me. (I wrote my own WM.) So I'm very likely going to be spending quite a bit of time trying to find a configuration that works for my eyes. I don't mind putting in that time, I'm just hoping that I can find something that works. But others might bounce off. This is actually why I have historically not purchased laptops with HiDPI displays, specifically to avoid dealing with this problem. I made an exception this time because there are so many other great aspects of the laptop.
Hyprland
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Wayland breaks your bad software
I've been wanting to try http://hyprland.org/, but since plasma gets me far enough and provides a working taskbar (wifi, sound, bluetooth, mount, clipboard) and virtual desktops on which I end up opening just firefox and emacs I haven't really given it a chance.
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Hyprland Crash Course
Hyprland builds using a pinned commit of wlroots instead of a tagged release because wlroots release schedule is too slow for Hyprland's development [0]
This turns into a problem for maintainers because many distributions refuse to ship non tagged versions of software
Hyprland used to depend on wlroots-git, but when it made the switch to use specific pinned commits a lot more distributions started to package it [1], but some still refuse to do so such as Debian.
[0] https://github.com/hyprwm/hyprland/issues/302#issuecomment-1...
[1] https://gitlab.alpinelinux.org/alpine/aports/-/merge_request...
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Improving cursor rendering on Wayland
I have Hyprland a try some weeks/months ago, and seemingly it had a video memory leak where after some hours of usage, it ended up taking more than 5GB of VRAM, with no signs of slowing down.
I found one issue (https://github.com/hyprwm/Hyprland/issues/1504) mentioning something similar, but it was closed and I was still experiencing the same issue, so not sure what's going on.
Gnome3 doesn't manifest the same issue, so worth checking out if it happens to you if you're curious about moving from Gnome to Hyprland.
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RubyWM – an X11 window manager in pure Ruby
I've been an X11 holdout since forever, but after nvidia proprietary drivers broke for the millionth time on a system upgrade, I switched over to Nouveau and the "Hyprland" tiling compositor on Wayland. It's the only setup that felt worth the upgrade to me. Setup was easy, animations are very slick (scroll down on the link below for a sample), and I've had no bugs or quirks. Highly recommend checking it out if you're bored or curious.
https://hyprland.org/
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Is there any transparent themes for GTK 2 or QT?
I did some research as far as I know there isn't really a way for it to have a transparent window but not transparent text although I found this, basically change the opacity of the window/program. You can also set active and inactive opacity on the window if that's any help.
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Hyprland broken config file :c
# Monitor Configs # source https://wiki.hyprland.org/Configuring/Monitors/#general monitor=,preferred,auto,1 # for pluggin' in random monitors monitor=,highrr,auto,1 # prefer high refresh rate for all monitors input { kb_layout= kb_variant=ffffff kb_model= kb_options=compose:rctrl,level3:ralt_switch kb_rules= follow_mouse=1 touchpad { natural_scroll=yes disable_while_typing=true scroll_factor=1 } } misc { disable_hyprland_logo=true animate_mouse_windowdragging=false # this fixes the laggy window movement (source: https://github.com/hyprwm/Hyprland/issues/1753) animate_manual_resizes=false # fixes slow resizes } general { #sensitivity=1.0 # for mouse cursor gaps_in=8 gaps_out=15 border_size=4 col.active_border=0xfff5c2e7 col.inactive_border=0xff45475a col.group_border=0xff89dceb col.group_border_active=0xfff9e2af apply_sens_to_raw=0 # whether to apply the sensitivity to raw input (e.g. used by games where you aim using your mouse)
- Ghost anime girl when moving Firefox windows sometimes
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Regular package vs git package
Therefore I am considering switching to hyprland-nvidia-git, but when I look at its AUR page (https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/hyprland-nvidia-git) it says 0.31 as the version, whereas the latest version is 0.32 (https://github.com/hyprwm/Hyprland/releases). I thought the git package would be cutting edge "automatically", but perhaps I'm missing something...?
- Framework 13 with AMD Ryzen 7040 Series Makes for a Great Linux Laptop
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Drop-down alacritty terminal on Hyprland
This is what I've found so far:
What are some alternatives?
team - Rust teams structure
sway - i3-compatible Wayland compositor
xgb - The X Go Binding is a low-level API to communicate with the X server. It is modeled on XCB and supports many X extensions.
awesome - awesome window manager
Elm - Compiler for Elm, a functional language for reliable webapps.
river - [mirror] A dynamic tiling Wayland compositor
NCoC - No Code of Conduct: A Code of Conduct for Adults in Open Source Software
wayfire - A modular and extensible wayland compositor
pkgstats.archlinux.de - Arch Linux package statistics website
qtile - :cookie: A full-featured, hackable tiling window manager written and configured in Python (X11 + Wayland)
byteorder - Rust library for reading/writing numbers in big-endian and little-endian.
xmonad - The core of xmonad, a small but functional ICCCM-compliant tiling window manager