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I decided to dive heads first into window managers and need your input for your guidance. I'm absolutely not a Linux-pro. I basically never use the terminal, just started using Github, and only used Gnome (+ KDE for 1/8th the time) for now.

I already informed myself in the last months a bit in what mess I will jump into, but that didn't prepare me at all... Or at least not as much as I would have liked.
I find it a bit hard to get content for this topic. For Gnome or KDE for example exist trillions of videos and guides, and all TWM-content is only from and for hardcore enthusiasts who are already neck deep into that topic for decades.

One thing I already noticed is that everything is very technical. Everything is in a text file and accessed via terminal. I like that, but it's just different.
Also, there's no way to just learn one thing, no. You have to work yourself into many tools all at once, which is super frightening, but interesting.


First off all, I need your choice of packages to make it a fully functional desktop.

Right now, I use Niri, for now in a VM, which comes with a few basic things out of the box, like portals, and additional stuff, like some packages from Sway.
But basically everything else, like bars, decoration, and more, is not preinstalled.
When you use it the first time, it's very barebones and no eye candy by default.

I would like to hear what "essential" stuff, and what "Because I like it"-stuff you suggest.
Maybe differentiate it with "I personally use it" and "You and everyone else should use that, it should be a default."

Personally, I would like to have:

^(£ = nice to have; ¥ = basic functionality)

  • ¥ A bar, like waybar
  • £ KDE-Connect: does that work on TWMs? Is there a good implementation? Can I use GSConnect elsewhere too?
  • ¥ A good global search tool like KRunner or the one from Gnome
  • ¥ Clipboard manager
  • £ Wallpaper switcher
  • £ Eye candy in general, e.g. dotfiles (those are the settings for each element, like the bar, right?)
  • More things will be added later :)

Also, do you have any tips for a total noob in that topic? Any things you regretted when you started and now wish others to avoid?
General usage tips for someone who only used full fletched DEs until now?

And, most importantly, do you have any resources where I can read/ watch more into for the future?
Sure, the readme.md on the projects' page is the best information for that specifically, especially technical stuff, but I don't know where to get more general information, like discussions, comparisons, and more. The only example I can think of is !unixporn@lemmy.ml for inspiration, but not much more. Do you have any blogs or threads you can recommend?


Thanks in advance for your help!

I plan to post a "My Linux week"-report very soon, since there has been a lot happening in the last days. I literally just "discovered" Github for example 🫠

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[–] z3rOR0ne@lemmy.ml 11 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago) (1 children)

TWMs can give you an extremely customized setup and potentially increase the speed of your workflow once you get into the groove of using them.

A couple suggestions:

  • Get familiar with the command line if you aren't already. Know how to adjust volume settings, connect to local wifi, etc. All from command line tools. You can of course use GUI tools that do the same, but knowing how to launch essential necessities from the CLI comes in handy if something in your configs break.

  • Create keyboard shortcuts for your most commonly used applications. The workflows of TWMs are usually similar to Vim in that mouse use is discouraged. On that note:

  • Consider purchasing an Ortholinear Keyboard if you can afford one. This was a gamechanger for me. As I no longer had to reach across an 80 key keyboard to reach for certain keys. Every key instead is solely a matter of moving my fingertips instead. A good beginner one is the Preonic, or the Planck.

  • Install and learn to use the Vimium browser extension. I'll not try and convert you to using Vim, but Vimium allows easy browsing of the web without use of the mouse (or excessively tabbing through a web page's links). This comes in handy when using a TWM. Obviously this works incredibly well with Vim/Neovim as well, but again, that's for you to decide.

  • Install an application launcher. I personally like dmenu, but rofi, wofi, etc. all work just as well as the others for the most part. They especially become useful when you start scripting custom features for them. Eventually you'll want to run an application neither from a terminal nor a keyboard shortcut. An application launcher is a must when working with a TWM.

  • I recommend using a window swallower for applications where you have a "useless terminal output" window. I have used devour and gulp on X11. I have yet to find one that works on Wayland (if anyone knows of any, please let me know). This is particularly nice when viewing videos using mpv.

Obviously this is all my humble opinion, but I have a love of Tiling Window Managers and this is what has worked for me. Lastly, I do apologize for no recommendations on bars, I simply don't use one, and instead rely on a constantly running btop for system monitoring. So can't speak to that subject.

[–] Guenther_Amanita@feddit.de 3 points 9 months ago (1 children)

Thank you a lot for that helpful and elaborate answer!

[–] Certainity45@lemmy.ml 2 points 9 months ago (1 children)

Try Manjaro Sway. It is preconfigured and has many superior features built-in. The wallpaper contains the keybinds. When you learn to use that preconfigured Sway, you can try to build your own setup in a virtual machine and when you're satisfied, take the dotfiles into a usb stick or make the vm guest as your real Linux install.

[–] Cwilliams 2 points 9 months ago (1 children)
[–] Certainity45@lemmy.ml 1 points 9 months ago

So what? For newbies it isn't as bad rant Youtubers tend to claim, but yeah I guess the problems are real. However, my brother has daily driven Manjaro KDE for 4 years and hasn't have bigger or more issues what you would have with Ubuntu.

I also recommended to try it out, not to daily drive it. Manjaro's Sway configuration is much more fine-tuned than in the Fedora Sway.

[–] Dirk@lemmy.ml 7 points 9 months ago (1 children)

A bar, like waybar

Why not waybar? 😆

If you want to go all in, check out Eww - it's a lovely over-engineered and super customizable widgets framework that you can use to build a fully custom desktop bar, too. (and needs a lot of more work than waybar to initially set up)

Wallpaper switcher

Depending on your compositor there already might be something implemented that handles wallpaper switching. Maybe check out the super simple wbg application, or have a look at swww if you want ~~a bit~~ ~~a lot~~ tons of more features.

General usage tips for someone who only used full fletched DEs until now?

If you're on Hyprland or interested in using it, maybe check out My Linux For Work's Hyprland setup if you want something ready to use.

[–] scrooge101@lemmy.ml 4 points 9 months ago

I second using a preconfig for Hyprland if you want to have something fancy and usable out of the box. You can build on top of that.

[–] leanleft@lemmy.ml 3 points 9 months ago

the i3/sway scratchpad feature is handy. extra esp at beginner stage.

[–] kittykittycatboys@lemmy.blahaj.zone 3 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago) (1 children)

for global search i would recommend rofi-wayland !

overall, my best advice is to steal, mix n match others configs (make sure to keep track and source them tho !) and find what u like best, if ur only starting dont try and do everything from scratch !!

if u want a notification system, i use dunst :3

[–] Guenther_Amanita@feddit.de 2 points 9 months ago
[–] StrangeAstronomer@lemmy.ml 3 points 9 months ago

waybar is good

scrcpy for android connectivity; syncthing to get files to and fro android (and any other linux system)

clipman for clipboard manager

wallpaper - whatever for? with a TWM you rarely see the background

emacs - because it's life (I jest)

[–] dino@discuss.tchncs.de 3 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago)

Interesting topic, this was also relevant to me some years ago when I started dabbling in twm, esp. i3wm in that time. To this day I am using i3 because its "easy" to set up for me and I started using a repository on codeberg.org for version control of my dotfiles (https://www.chezmoi.io/).

I am also torn on the subject of using twm nowadays, at work I am using i3, but at home I am still in the woes of a fully fledged KDE. I love to work on the terminal and prefer most applications to be cli based instead of having a full gui. But recently I finally took the plunge on trying a multiplexer (https://zellij.dev/) which actually makes me think, twm are not really that necessary once you start using a terminal multiplexer.

Because what you will notice is that it doesn't make a lot of sense to tile ALL of your windows all the time, mostly its for cli applications, which is handled by the multiplexer in a perfectly fine way. Also when it comes to eye candy...with twm you will mostly never see your wallpaper, apart from some artificially created layouts which you can post on various *unixporn sites.

While you want a lot of windows as fullscreen, depending on your screen size. (most videos, browser etc.) So maybe you don't really need a twm and can instead work with any lightweight window manager, the beauty of going non-fully-DE is that you can mix and match all your favorite programs however you like! Take a look at and check out some of those git pages maybe you find something which suits more to your needs: https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Wayland#Tiling

[–] hollunder@discuss.tchncs.de 2 points 9 months ago

Just my experience as I started from a similar background. Some weeks ago I had the urge to try TWM myself for the first time. Long time DE user, mostly Ubuntu and switched to fedora some weeks prior. The way I did it was to install sway on top of my fedora installation (with gnome). This way I could and still can choose which session to start at login. And it gave me the opportunity to work out some things using gnome until I grasped what is going on and needed in sway. Over time I was able to build up my sway settings/apps that now I would feel relatively safe use it without a DE installed parallel. Next fresh install I will probably skip the DE and just use a TWM.

[–] TylerDurdenJunior@lemmy.ml 1 points 9 months ago

i keep returning to BSPWM. Every now and then i try out Gnome or Cinnamon, but always find myself returning to my tiling BSPWM setup.

The only thing i miss from time to time is an actual alt-tab window switcher that you have in more ordinary window managers.

There is some kind of like alternatives, but i haven't found anything that actual can fully replace it

[–] downhomechunk@midwest.social 1 points 9 months ago

I was messing around with sway for a while and started with this, which I found easy to grasp and very convenient.

https://nwg-piotr.github.io/nwg-shell/

[–] pr06lefs@lemmy.ml 1 points 9 months ago

Personally I use xmonad with xfce in no-desktop mode. And I configure almost nothing.

Xfce gives me multi monitor setup/positioning, a shutdown dialog, and other niceties like mouse config. I have dmenu for starting GUI programs. Only thing that bothers me is nextcloud sync demands a taskbar in which to put its icon. Since there isn't one, I have to cope with its login BS each time I boot up.

For pretty much anything else I go to the terminal. What time is it? type 'date' and press enter. Wireless? 'sudo nmtui'. Etc. I started doing this as a way to brush up on terminal knowledge, and now I see no reason to change.

[–] Pantherina@feddit.de 1 points 9 months ago (1 children)

Some thoughts, never used a TWM

  • I would love to try, but never got used to workspaces and on a 14in laptop you never tile more than once horizontally, everything else is unusable with apps that have menus etc.
  • also forced tiling breaks many apps that open in their perfect size. A mix between tiling and floating is needed.
  • learning a nice minimal UI editor is key, I am still using Kate and suppose I should switch
  • there are really little Terminals with tabs outside of DEs. Alacritty is damn fast but will never get tabs. Using tmux is strange and feels overcomplicated for that, also has no tab bar.
  • I prefer many KDE apps, use all GNOME apps as Flatpaks, but Dolphin & Kate would pull in tons of dependencies. TWM users have shitty file managers in my experience, pcmanfm-qt was the second best after Dolphin but also not really great.
  • you need app systray icons, and I would also not want to live without the basic KDE systray features like volume, bluetooth, wifi. Those will just have way less features on TWMs I think.

Fedora has some Hyprland packages packaged, many more in a COPR. There is [github.com/secureblue/secureblue](secureblue with some TWMs) or the regular base github.com/wayblueorg/wayblue which has River, Hyprland, Sway and Wayfire images.

Here people can work together to create a good experience out of the box.

Regular Fedora Sway too of course, but my experience with it was very broken, and aestetically bad.

[–] Guenther_Amanita@feddit.de 1 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago) (1 children)

Thanks for your comment!

I would love to try, but never got used to workspaces and on a 14in laptop you never tile more than once horizontally, everything else is unusable with apps that have menus etc.

Same for me. It's supposed to be on my ultra wide screen desktop PC, on my laptop I will stay on Gnome due to the clutter free UI and the ability to change workspaces. On the other hand, you switch workspaces with keyboard shortcuts and then utilize the small screen estate better.
^but those glorious gestures on Gnome tho...

A mix between tiling and floating is needed.

There's a mockup/ plans somewhere for Gnome for dynamic tiling. The apps then tile and arrange themselves on their prefered sizes. That's a reason why most core apps in Libadwaita need dynamic sidebars and stuff like that, that's their preparation :)

I prefer many KDE apps, use all GNOME apps as Flatpaks, but Dolphin & Kate would pull in tons of dependencies.

I'm a bit torn apart. Dolphin for example feels more powerful, but I usually don't need this much functionality and prefer simplicity. But, at least for my desktop PC, where I edit photos for example, and do more stuff in general, those previews of RAW images or plugins with installed apps are just god send. You can use Distrobox for that use case tho, here's a link to a post I made a while ago: https://feddit.de/post/8018330
You can install Dolphin for example in that container, but keep your host minimal.

you need app systray icons, and I would also not want to live without the basic KDE systray features like volume, bluetooth, wifi. Those will just have way less features on TWMs I think.

You can still get very powerful setups on TWMs. There are a dozen of bars with all features you need.

Fedora has some Hyprland packages packaged, many more in a COPR. There is [github.com/secureblue/secureblue](secureblue with some TWMs) or the regular base github.com/wayblueorg/wayblue which has River, Hyprland, Sway and Wayfire images. Here people can work together to create a good experience out of the box.

I am already trying to incorporate my setup with Niri (the TWM) into said uBlue images to provide a fully functional TWM-DE. I'm just currently learning how to do that, and my past tries have failed for now in the last days. But I'm onto it.

[–] Pantherina@feddit.de 1 points 9 months ago

Tbh I dont think Distrobox is a senseful way to run GUI apps. It works well as a workaround (firefox, qgis, rstudio, even the Ubuntu PPA VLC) but its slow and bloated.

Mixing GNOME and KDE is a bad idea, no idea what iconset many TWMs use though.

Cosmic by System76 is a tiling-optimized GNOME desktop. And they also have Epoch, which is very pre alpha but will be even better

[–] flashgnash@lemm.ee 1 points 9 months ago

Swaybg works pretty well for me. I just configured it load ~/wallpaper.jpg and have never touched it since (if I want to change I just swap out the bg file)

Waybar is awesome, being able to use CSS for it is great and it's pretty easy to make your own modules for it if you know your way around a shell script

As far as I'm aware for clipboard management I only installed wl-copy and wl-paste, though that's because I use them in scripts and some software depends on them

Search tool I'm using rofi but might switch soon because a hyprland update broke the theme I was using

For most of the tiling WMs out there they are by nature very technical because the only people willing to completely change the way they use their computer are people who are already very comfortable with them

That said, I think there are all in one tilers out there that do a lot for you by default, and I believe you can install a tiling WM over KDE as well and just use its stuff

[–] Ephera@lemmy.ml 1 points 9 months ago (1 children)

Personally, I use tiling from within KDE, via this: https://zeroxoneafour.github.io/polonium/

It can be buggy and it's definitely not as fun as dicking around with minimalistic window managers, but well, it is an easier option for a full-fledged desktop with tiling.

There's also some options like that for GNOME, for example PaperWM, but I'm not really informed, if that's still the best choice. PaperWM itself is certainly non-traditional in how its tiling workflow works...

[–] Guenther_Amanita@feddit.de 3 points 9 months ago

I already tried Polonium and didn't like it. It really feels messy.

Forge/ PopShell are a bit better, but you still notice Mutter struggling with the extensions.

Same with PaperWM. Hence why I want to use Niri, which is pretty much PaperWM, but standalone.