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taeric 3 days ago

I'm curious how you mean? I'm mainly on PopOs nowadays, and it seems largely fine? What are the main annoyances?

oguz-ismail 3 days ago | parent [-]

Rounded corners and huge paddings

zamadatix 3 days ago | parent | next [-]

I'll take filled rounded corners over the window border bulge atrocity seen in IRIX.

Also keep in mind IRIX (and most classic desktops) assumed 72 DPI displays rather than 96 DPI displays. That means when you view a screenshot or render them unadjusted they look 75% the size they did back in the day. Still plenty denser in many ways... just not as much as loading it up on a modern "96 DPI is 100%" screen would imply.

mixmastamyk 2 days ago | parent [-]

I miss real window borders that you could see and drag—what a concept.

spookie 3 days ago | parent | prev | next [-]

This. The very reason I use KDE (I have tried tiling wm's, and they are horrible if I use my drawing tablet, which I use a LOT), then customize it in a way to minimize wasted space (taskbar on the left, take out window borders padding, etc).

Then I go and enable compact look on firefox, take out a bunch of useless icons for things I don't use, and bam my 4K screen is able to accommodate all my work. Even though I do still use 125% DPI scale, not via KDE mind you, because I love eyes.

And even then, it still looks slick and modern. It's crazy how much space we waste with flat design on desktop. Crazyyy.

DrPhish 3 days ago | parent [-]

Out of curiosity, what was the showstopper on dwm?

spookie a day ago | parent | next [-]

I tend to have one hand holding a pen on a drawing tablet. I could customise any wm to be controlled with just the left side of the keyboard obviously but I fear I would have arthritis from doing that.

I'm half joking, I did use i3 for a few years, and have tried many others (bspwm comes to mind). But currently it makes no sense to use keyboard centric wms of any kind.

oguz-ismail 2 days ago | parent | prev [-]

> dwm is customized through editing its source code

nextos 2 days ago | parent [-]

Sounds scary but it's giving you some compile-time guarantees about correctness.

StumpWM and XMonad do the same and they are quite easy to use, especially the former.

They also lead to very space-efficient setups. Windows can be tightly packed.

rhabarba 2 days ago | parent | next [-]

StumpWM is in a special position here as "compile-time" on Common Lisp is roughly the same thing as "runtime".

nextos 2 days ago | parent [-]

Sure, my statement referred to dwm, and it also applies to XMonad.

justmarc 2 days ago | parent | prev [-]

The only compile time guarantee you'd have by making changes is that it would run, not it being correct nor functional.

nextos a day ago | parent [-]

Static types do provide some guarantees as they rule out an entire class of runtime errors. In case of XMonad, since Haskell's type system is more expressive, the class of runtime errors ruled out at compile-time is broader.

mhd 2 days ago | parent | prev | next [-]

OpenLook would like to have a word about those corners…

(But yes, in general it's all custom "cards" and list views. HTML didn't allow a good set of GUI widgets, so people adapted, and now the cruel circle has closed with desktop UIs being "informed" by web and mobile views)

taeric 3 days ago | parent | prev [-]

Funny, I'll have to look when back at a computer in a few days. I don't recall the padding being that bad. Granted... I do largely use it as an emacs machine. I'm sure that colors what I notice.