kek
Use dwm
Sane defaults, don't need to fiddle around in config files to get something comfortable. Also integrates well with modern desktop shit; not a fan of suckless and believe the mouse is a useful tool.
fuck you all zoomers.
a real man use fvwm
>I don't like the idea of stacks. When i'm opning a new window when i already have another i want the window that is already opened to stay as the master. Because most of the time im opening just a terminal for some small command, i don't need half the screen for that
If you knew anything about dwm you'd know that can be changed.
>no Janet, daddy can't play catch with you
>he needs to bully nerds on the internet over their technology hobbies
>this is the only work daddy is qualified to do
>no, mcdonald's won't hire me back after the mayonnaise incident
>this is what pays your gender affirming hormone treatments, honey
I was using i3 for a few months but I realized, that most of the tine I only had a single window per desktop and in the rare cases where I actually did have multiple windows open on a single desktop, those windows were arranged in a specific layout that wouldn't change for a few hours (mostly browser on one half of the screen and one or two terminals on the other half).
I can get the same functionality in openbox with just 7 keybindings (ToggleMaximize + MoveResizeTo to the two screen halves and the four corners), but I gain a lot of advantages:
--Most windows that I open just for a few seconds are better if they're in a sstacking layout (e.g. wifi settings, image viewer, terminal if I just want to type a quick command)
--Theming. titlebars in i3 (and other tiling WMs from what I've seen in desktop threads) look like shit. I mainly had the problem that they weren't distinctive enough and blended in with my terminal windows. I know most tiling WM users disable titlebars completely, but I find them practical.
--I don't lose the ability to use the mouse. Sometimes I only have one hand free, so it gets hard to use some keyboard short uts, mainly the ones for moving windows (Super+Shift+hjkl), because my keyboard only has one Super key
--Minimizing windows. Sometimes I want to have a window accessible quickly, but not visible (e.g. music player). I know i3 has the "scratchpad" but that gets ugly if you want to "minimize" multiple windows
I only miss three things from i3:
--The way it was configured. xml is just plain annoying to write.
--Tabbed windows, but I only used it for terminals, so I just installed tabbed from suckless
--The way virtual desltops were handled. Switching to a desktop thay doesn't exist creates it, empty desktops disappear. Openbox's way is kinda shit. All open desktops must be sequential. If you have 4 desktops and close number 2, desktops 3 and 4 become 2 and 3.
xmonad is better
Jow Forums is too low IQ for xmonad
Check em
bug.n for me