Linked by diegocg on Sun 13th May 2012 23:48 UTC
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RE[7]: Comment by Drumhellar
by gan17 on Mon 14th May 2012 04:50
in reply to "RE[6]: Comment by Drumhellar"
Dynamic basic means manual in my simpleton-lingo. Sorry for the confusion.
Hmm,
I personally prefer the Master-Stack model found Dwm/Xmonad/SpectrWM, but maybe you might like something like WMFS2.
Project Page: http://wmfs.info/
ArchWiki: https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/WMFS2
Decent Guide: http://crunchbanglinux.org/forums/topic/18819/wmfs2-guide/
Supposed to offer the best of both tiling and stacking worlds, at least according to the people that talk about it (and the screenshots).
Very little experience with Awesome and no experience with Bluetile, so I can't help you there. Awesome can probably do what you're asking as well.
RE[8]: Comment by Drumhellar
by ssokolow on Mon 14th May 2012 05:06
in reply to "RE[7]: Comment by Drumhellar"
Dynamic basic means manual in my simpleton-lingo. Sorry for the confusion.
Hmm,
I personally prefer the Master-Stack model found Dwm/Xmonad/SpectrWM, but maybe you might like something like WMFS2.
Hmm,
I personally prefer the Master-Stack model found Dwm/Xmonad/SpectrWM, but maybe you might like something like WMFS2.
Thanks. I'll take a look at it once I have a moment to spare.
I like the concept of the master-stack model but the way I tend to use my stuff precludes using it exclusively. (It also doesn't help that I've got a pair of 1280x1024 monitors, which is too narrow for master-stack with many of my apps)
If I could find a Window manager that was lightweight and themable like Openbox but easier to extend, I'd probably start experimenting with implementing a hybrid of floating, tiling, and tabbing that does what I want.
As is, I just have to try to think of ways to work around the existing Window manager to implement as much as possible of what I want without killing off the mature floating implementation.
Edited 2012-05-14 05:08 UTC
RE[8]: Comment by Drumhellar
by raboof on Mon 14th May 2012 16:37
in reply to "RE[7]: Comment by Drumhellar"
Dynamic basic means manual in my simpleton-lingo. Sorry for the confusion.
Ha, that's funny. I always use 'static' vs 'dynamic' to mean whether the WM ever resizes windows unless I specifically ask it to - so I'd consider manual tiling 'static' and basically anything else 'dynamic'.
(there's not a lot of tiling wm's that are 'static' in this sense - I ended up maintaining one that does as I didn't find any others I could get used to. Shameless plug: check out http://notion.sf.net if interested)





Member since:
2010-01-21
Bluetile can be configured to let you resize your tiles by grabbing the border between two windows and dragging. (Like the splitter widgets used to implement things like file manager sidebars)
What specifically do you mean by "dynamic tiler"? I've never heard the term before.
Not necessarily. I'd settle for something that implements enough of the de facto standard interactions from floating WMs that I could ease myself into it. (Again, something Bluetile scores well on. dwm-derived WMs like AwesomeWM seem to revel in making sure as few keybindings are shared with floating WMs as possible.)
Edited 2012-05-14 04:42 UTC