muxika lemmy.world3Hide 3 repliesOoh, that's gorgeous. What attracted you to niri over other tiling wms? I'm thinking of Wayland options for my laptop.2Reply
vvarnia replylemmy.blahaj.zoneRecently switched to Niri: Vertical tiling is very easy to navigate by keyboard and mouse - no more windows cluttering Predefined vertical workspaces for you apps to predefine and separate apps (ie: separate all communication apps to reduce distraction) Flawless multi monitor support: move windows or whole workspaces between monitors You can use Dank Linux or Noctalia Shell for easy setup or configure waybar to add an status bar. 5Reply
vvariety4me replylemmy.zip1Hide 1 replyNiri is a scrolling window manager. Its workflow is diffent from a tiler. Maybe this video might help. https://youtube.com/watch?v=DeYx2exm04M4Reply
toman replylemmy.zipTo anyone familiar with Sway who'd like to try a scrolling WM, check out Scroll. It's a fork of Sway (you can use the same config with minimal changes) which behaves similarly to Niri.1Reply
4 replies
Ooh, that's gorgeous. What attracted you to niri over other tiling wms? I'm thinking of Wayland options for my laptop.
Recently switched to Niri:
You can use Dank Linux or Noctalia Shell for easy setup or configure waybar to add an status bar.
Niri is a scrolling window manager. Its workflow is diffent from a tiler. Maybe this video might help. https://youtube.com/watch?v=DeYx2exm04M
To anyone familiar with Sway who'd like to try a scrolling WM, check out Scroll. It's a fork of Sway (you can use the same config with minimal changes) which behaves similarly to Niri.