I made outlines for KDE Breeze window decoration

This page summarizes the projects mentioned and recommended in the original post on news.ycombinator.com

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  • Plasma-window-decorations

    Window styles for KDE Plasma highlighting the active window in the color scheme's accent color

  • > That would take years. I use Debian Stable.

    That kinda is the whole point of static releases like debian stable, ubuntu lts, red hat or windows ltsc? That you actively don't want to have any changes like these but want stable (=static) foundations to build on. (currently writing this on old stable; don't feel bothered to upgrade right now)

    > I think Plasma has something like "Decorations" - can a custom decoration be used? Can one use scripts in the "Decorations"?

    The software under discussion seems to be a change to the breeze window decoration so for this one probably not (yet), but e.g. for aurorae

    https://store.kde.org/p/1678088

  • krohnkite

    A dynamic tiling extension for KWin

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  • i3helper

    Augment i3 with some actions in response to events

  • I use i3 (standard, no gaps), so the tabbing mode works particularly well as a replacement for window tabs. I can probably go up to twenty windows open on a given virtual desktop in tab mode with no issue. I usually use a 24" 3840x2160 screen in 100% mode and zoom in the content. This works well enough even on my 14" 1920x1080 laptop, but I avoid doing "serious" work on it, since I don't like being hunched over and the screen is a bad joke.

    Yes, when there are many tabs open, at some point, I can't distinguish them easily anymore, especially on the laptop. But the same happens with tabs. At least I can scroll my mouse wheel to change between them, which didn't use to work with tabs.

    My coping mechanism is saving the tabs I want to keep for later as bookmarks. Getting back to them has the same kind of probability as when I used to use tabs. But the win of this approach is that I don't have open webpages hanging around eating resources.

    I've also found that there are basically two ways I use my computer:

    1. I'm just randomly browsing, and I am going to open a zillion tabs (say while browsing HN) but then I'll read them and close them sequentially. No jumping from one to another, so the tabs being small is not an issue.

    2. Having several windows open that I all need while working. In this case, I'll set them up in some tiling setup, usually an editor / terminal where I work on one side of the screen, and multiple browser windows in tabbed mode on the other. I then jump back and forth between the two sides. If I need to access a specific browser window that's not visible and there are too many open to know where to click (which does happen, but rarely) I'll just use the jump to window function of rofi in fzf mode where I type in a part of its name and press enter. This isn't perfect, but it works well enough for me. Since i3 doesn't have an included "go back to previous window", I had to hack this on my own [0]. This could also be implemented by using window marks, though I've never tried that.

    ---

    [0] https://github.com/vladvasiliu/i3helper

    Other alternatives exist, but I thought it was fun to build my own.

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