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174
Joined
1 yr. ago

  • River

  • In a broad sense tags are like workspaces but one can toggle to view multiple of those at the same time. One can do much more but that is the gist of it.

  • friendship ended with workspaces/virtual-deskltops, now tags are my best friend

  • Benefits:

    • Fast context switch (browsing, editing, documentation, etc).
    • Fast grouping(again browsing and all).
    • Automatic grouping (one can set rules were opens were)
    • It is even more useful on single monitors, the little space one has means that usually on can split the screen no more than 2 times, this means that swtiching quickly between groups of windows save you a load of time.
    • On the long run one gets used to the workflow and the cognitive effort of moving around windows becomes super low.

    Cons:

    • Might take some cognitive effort getting used to the workflow/keybinds. (usually worth it in the long run)
    • Moving around windows or workspaces can be difficult if not setup up correctly.


    One step further

    Tags (as opposed of workspaces/virtual-desktops) are a system used by the likes of dwm, dwl, river, mangowc to choose what windows get displayed on the screen. This would allow you to toggle and view different groups of windows on the same screen(like viewing multiple virtual-desktops at the same time). This would allow one to do that super fast context switching at a more complex level if needed. For instance you could toggle the "tag 2" while viewing "tag 1" effectively merging the two tags into the same screen instead of switching back and forth with workspaces. This method requires a little of more focus and remembering the state of the windows/tags.


    Quick mention of my Window Managers if anyone is interested in the topic.

  • There is nothing to see because everything was destroyed.

  • Some time ago I answered this question on a post that seems have been deleted but got some good feedback:

    The most important decision as a new Linux user is the desktop environment, the most similar desktop environment to the Windows desktop are KDE Plasma and Cinnamon. This means your best options are:

    • Linux Mint (Cinnamon): They are the creators of the Cinnamon desktop environment and will be the default on installation.
    • Kubuntu (KDE Plasma): This is Ubuntu's official KDE Plasma flavour, it comes with everything as usual just different desktop.
    • Fedora (KDE Edition): Same story as Ubuntu here, only that with Fedora's own packages and environment.

    First I would check if the hardware is compatible (99% of the time is). Then I would check what software you need and/or want and check if it is available at these distros, and get familiar on how to install the software packages (either with their respective app stores or in the command line).

    There is a lot to learn but with these distros you can just install, forget and simply keep using them for eternity.

    The last and more important tip I have is to not to worry about the sea of options out there, you will not be missing anything huge by picking one or the other. Which is how most of new users feel (I did in my time).

    Hope you have a great Linux journey mate!

  • Wow, this pragtical editor is super fast. Thank you for sharing this.

  • I have the GTA San Andreas message sound for notifications, my friends always chuckle when I get a message.

  • Last point is the most important in my opinion

  • Exactly. Anyway, I was referring to KDE's file manager(Dolphin).

  • It is not Linux itself but:

    • I dislike when something goes wrong with a program and the documentation is not clear on how to fix it. But I do not complain because it is understandable when developers write documentation they have to choose who's hand to hold, if they choose to help everyone then the documentation can get long and perhaps redundant.
    • When one is a beginner and installs a distribution for the first time one can get scared by the splash screen showing errors which are 99% of the time safe to ignore (e.g showing that a device was not found). I know its important for developers and advanced users to know all this info but it can make beginners feel so damn scared (like me).
    • Naming, like in the general sense, it seems like many software have some ridiculous names (dolphin, ncmpcpp, gimp, foot, gnome). Very subjective, I know, but in the end I love and hate these names.
    • Bluetooth... yeah.
  • Show it

    Jump
  • Upvote because you used DDG as a verb, and thanks for the info.

  • RAM

    Jump
  • relax mate

  • RAM

    Jump
  • Damn, how low can one even go?

  • RAM

    Jump
  • The fact that one can use a wm/compositor to make the desktop lighter is sick. I was using 350MB idle with Alpine + River, it is so damn snappy.

    I came to Linux for freedom and stayed for the performance.

  • I changed to Lemmy because I read about Lemmy first. After becoming interested I investigated, found much more articles suggesting Lemmy and those who suggested both gave preference to Lemmy.

  • pacman -Qqem to list your foreign packages (usually AUR ones)

  • I think this is the other way around, Windows Updates always fuck up the user.

    Space Force Meme

  • Linux @lemmy.world

    Maomao Is Renamed To "Mango"

    github.com /DreamMaoMao/mango
  • Window Managers @lemmy.zip

    Maomao Is Renamed To "Mango"

    github.com /DreamMaoMao/mango
  • Window Managers @lemmy.zip

    Which WM should i use?

  • linuxmemes @lemmy.world

    Clearly Inappropriate

  • Linux @lemmy.world

    Alpine Linux Setup

  • unixporn @lemmy.world

    Feels like autumn already

  • Unixporn @lemmy.ml

    Feels like autumn already

  • linuxmemes @lemmy.world

    Dirty Talk

  • linuxmemes @lemmy.world

    Desktop PTSD

  • Ask Lemmy @lemmy.world

    What are your favorite and least favorite pure chance and pure strategy games? And why?

  • Window Managers @lemmy.zip

    What is your favorite terminal fonts?

  • Window Managers @lemmy.zip

    New Releases Feeds

  • Asklemmy @lemmy.ml

    Email Clients That Allows Composing in Markdown?

  • Anything But Metric @discuss.tchncs.de

    About 2 furlongs. Not to be confused with a bees dick.

  • Asklemmy @lemmy.ml

    What hobbies do you practice that is other people's professions?

  • Free Software @lemmy.zip

    FOSS Gaming - A community-driven news hub for FOSS games, engines, and emulators

    fossgaming.codeberg.page
  • Asklemmy @lemmy.ml

    Why are h1 headings smaller than h2 when inside and article tag?

  • linuxmemes @lemmy.world

    I'm Guilty as Charged

  • Free Software @lemmy.zip

    Habit-Maker - FLOSS habit tracker app

    github.com /dessalines/habit-maker
  • Android @lemmy.world

    Habit-Maker - FLOSS habit tracker app

    github.com /dessalines/habit-maker