![]() ![]() Rows so that each window occupies a similar space. To rules, for instance the “fair” layout, which tiles in columns and It uses automatic layouts, that place your windows according To emphasize on that it start in floating mode by default. Officially a tiling window manager but a framework window manager, and ![]() It hasīecome quite popular, and it has a very well documented wiki. While I was using it, it hadįonts and it sucked with multiple monitors, which is the reason Iįlexible window manager that provides advanced automatic layouts. Still true with the switch to Google Code). Themselves a limit on its numbers of lines of codes (not sure if this is ![]() It is explicitly minimalist, and the developers used to impose While this is interesting, in practice I did not find much Tags, and that you can tag a window so that it will appear in It in any language you like however, and there are some already madeĪ special feature of wmii is that its workspaces are in fact Start calling external programs such as grep, sed and co. Written in shell, which makes it a bit hard to extend, and slow if you User interaction logic takes place in a distinct script which calls thatįunctions using that 9P filesystem. Wmii itself only implements window management functions, and all the Way: it exposes all its functions on a 9P virtual filesystem. It is fully scriptable in any language, in an interesting This system is very simple to controlįlexible enough for most situations, but it does not allow for arbitrary Of columns, and for each column you can choose either vertical split, It uses a column-based layout: you place windows in a number Or worst, at Launchpad, have almost not documentation, and never, ever a Move (why is it that all the software I have seen hosted at Google Code Minimalist window manager which used to be part of the suckless project, but is now hostedĪt Google Code and seems to have lost all its documentation during the For people in a hurry, here is a comparative table: wmii
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