Jwno is a highly customizable tiling window manager for Windows 10/11, built with Janet and ❤️. It brings to your desktop magical parentheses power, which, I assure you, is not suspicious at all, and totally controllable.
↫ Jwno documentation
Yes, it’s a Lisp system, so open your bag of spare parentheses and start configuring and customising it, because you’re going to need it if you want to use Jwno to its fullest.
In general, Jwno works as a keyboard driven tiling window manager. When a new window shows up, it tries to transform the window so it fits in the layout you defined. You can then use customized key bindings to modify the layout or manipulate your windows, rather than drag things around using the mouse. But, since a powerful generic scripting engine is built-in, you can literally do anything with it.
↫ Jwno documentation
It’s incredibly lightweight, comes as a single executable, integrates perfectly with Windows’ native virtual desktop and window management features, has support for REPL, and much more.
The only thing more cool than bolting a tiler onto the world’s most bloated graphical interface and calling yourself a “minimalist” is doing it all in Lisp.
LISP is a pretty minimal environment in terms of resources all things considered with respect to more modern languages/frameworks.
Also, bloat is such an overused term at this point, that it has become meaningless. How is the Windows 11 UI bloated?
Copyrighted to “Chibidou” a non-existant organisation fom asia. No thanks.