So Ive been using linux for a long time and mostly with gnome. I know about window managers and how using them will reduce the memory usage by system a lot because they are less bloated etc. I want to try a window manager on my nixos machine - this will be my first time trying one, I have good knowledge in programming so technical stuff wont bother me that much. Which window manager do you suggest? Customization is my priority.

  • Drito@sh.itjust.works
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    2 months ago

    I3/Sway seems to be popular, but I was disapointed when I tried them. I prefer Bspwm because windows are always spawned with a good height/width ratio. Computers are useful because of the automation capability, so it make no sense to use a WM without any automation.

    • joshzcold@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      How’s the stability of bspwm for you? It used to be my go-to but I think multiple monitors would make it crash when I used it years ago.

    • mhz (lemm.ee)@lemm.ee
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      2 months ago

      I would say sway for Wayland support. Better yet, Hyprland is an awesome one and well supported in Nix. Maybe disable animation to reduce memory usage

    • wwb4itcgas@lemm.ee
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      2 months ago

      I’m a happy i3 user, but that actually looks pretty enticing. Might give that a go the next time I’m trying something new.

  • cerement@slrpnk.net
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    2 months ago
    • main thing to keep in mind is that a window manager is normally just one component of a desktop environment – full desktop environments like Gnome go to great lengths to assemble a whole fleet of apps to work together to make a cohesive experience
    • if you’re going to forego the full desktop environment, then expect to have to fill in on the various missing pieces to suit your needs (file manager, terminal, text editor, clipboard manager, bar/panel/dock)
    • if you just want lighter weight but maintain a cohesive experience, then Xfce or LXQt
    • otherwise, there are a LOT of choices (both for X11 and for Wayland)
    • tiling window managers
      • i3 on X or Sway on Wayland are probably the most popular
        • special mention: Regolith – pairs Sway on the front end with Gnome components underneath
      • dwm for the full do-it-yourself experience
      • awesome if you like Lua, xmonad if you like Haskell, exwm if you live in Emacs, Qtile if you like Python
    • stacking window managers
      • Openbox for the old school feel, LabWC as the Wayland successor
      • IceWM and JWM for a minimal experience (both show up regularly on Raspberry Pi)
      • Motif for the retro enthusiast
      • shirro@aussie.zone
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        2 months ago

        Niri is very promising on a ultrawide. Not so good on a 3:2 laptop. I maintain a config to experiment with it but it’s a big commitment to change not just your desktop environment but your whole workflow and then to have different environments on devices with different screen aspect ratios.

    • Übercomplicated@lemmy.ml
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      2 months ago

      I actually really love icewm. I’m still gonna install i3 on every system (for a default experience, when I configure I usually switch over to something else), but I’ll always keep icewm as a backup. Also the default wm on openSUSE which makes me happy

  • Trimatrix@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Disclaimer: If you want to explore window managers then go ham! Linux is all about exploration.

    Now, If you think the grass might be greener on a different desktop manager then stick with gnome. By no means am I saying Gnome is the best, but its more of a situation where it will devolve into the quirks you know vs the quirks you don’t know situation.

    Personal Antidote, I started with Gnome and used Gnome for years. Got curious and started jumping around I tried KDE, I3W, XFCE, Pure X, Etc. There were things I liked about each one of them but the quirks of each deviating from my expectations coming from gnome was too much and I ended up sticking with gnome.

    That being said, out of necessity due to system constraints I run XFCE when I need a light weight DE. A close second in that realm is LXDE But I don’t like its default aesthetic nor do I feel like customizing it since I do most of my computing in a terminal.

  • Desyn0xox@lemmy.ml
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    2 months ago

    I feel like hyprland is really popular, or at least it’s the one I most often hear mentioned. It should be really configurable as well, so maybe it’s worth a look. I’m not sure you’re going to notice much of a performance difference though, unless the device has a really limited amount of RAM.

        • thingsiplay@beehaw.org
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          2 months ago

          Unless you actually interact with the developer. Such cases are in example when you do a bug report and discuss this. Or in social media. But its not only about the interaction, but the toxicity of the person towards other people and projects. Also if I am interested and using a tool, then I will probably read blog posts, update notes and so on too.

          Even if I don’t interact with someone, I don’t have to support bad behavior. I also don’t have much faith into the project with a human I dislike how the person treats others. If you don’t care and are unaffected by it, its your decision to do what you want and accept.

          • Sivecano@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            2 months ago

            Fair enough, I have never really made toxic experiences with the Hyprland community but I also just don’t really talk to people

  • FreeWilliam@lemmy.ml
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    2 months ago

    Suckles DWM is amazing. No bloat at all. There is only 1 config file, and you edit it with pure C like a gigachad. Like all suckles software, it strictly obeys the Unix philosophy, and it has been the cause of the most lightweight set ups that are also cool hacker-looking

  • MonkderVierte@lemmy.ml
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    2 months ago

    Depends on usecase and Xorg vs. Wayland. I like Niri on my Thinkpad with touchscreen, using Wayland.

  • mathemachristian [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    2 months ago

    gnome + paperwm, on a laptop I found there are so many things that are a headache to configure, like battery alerts, bluetooth, wifi that it’s just a hassle for what amounts to like half an hour longer battery life

  • Übercomplicated@lemmy.ml
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    2 months ago

    Wayland: SwayWM, River (the most customizable wm I’ve ever used).

    X11: DWM (configured via C, a little bit of effort if you’re not a minimalist), xmonad (via Haskell, on par with River).

    My recommendation for getting started is Sway, but the others are definitely more customizable, as they use PLs for configuration. BSPWM and i3 are also good for X11, and a good middle ground between DWM’s nerdery and xmonad’s Haskell barrier. Wayland offers a much better experience if you’re not using Nvidia though. Some will recommend hyprland, but I really don’t like (IMHO). There are also some controversies around it’s leadership…

    • joshzcold@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      One thing that has kept me on dwm for so long is that my patched configuration no longer needs any more changes and I take it with me wherever I go. it was challenging but rewarding.

      Never an upgrade needed.

      I eventually want to go to Wayland and River seems nice!

      Also might want to give https://codeberg.org/dwl/dwl a shot for dwm in Wayland

  • kixik@lemmy.ml
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    2 months ago

    If you’re not into tiling, but still want several of the advantages of sway, it offers a couple of additional modes, stacked and tabbed. I really loved tabbed setting some things to be floating. It’s like it sounds, it offers a horizontal tab with all windows within per workspace, maximized below the tabs… Stacked is similar but it stacks the tabs vertically. If you’d tell me before a tiling compositor has such functionality I wouldn’t have believed it. I like it better than stacking compositors, :)