remember the post that was made a few months ago about an infinite canvas/scrollable WM? Here we have the stable release of a (onedirectional) scrollable one inspired by gnome's PaperWM.
Isn't it the opposite then? Since your windows will have vertical scrolls, it makes sense to tile them horizontally in order to maximize vertical space for each window, imo.
Usually people like to maximize the height of windows, especially to have 2 windows side by side, so it just conceptually makes a lot of sense to have every window have the maximum height and just add windows horizontally so they are actually visible like in normal tiling window managers. Maximizing the width of windows doesn't really make that much sense honestly, because most horizontal space is wasted because theres so much horizontal space compared to vertical space.
The exact same thing would happen if you tried to scroll horizontally though? It's a 2d axis on a wheel, depending on where your focus is you're going to go the same direction.
Looks nice. Is anyone able to tell if I'm going to screw up my KDE install if I try it out? I've never tried WM / compositors on KDE that weren't targeting KDE before.
It should be fine I think. On Linux you can have multiple Desktop Environments installed (ex KDE Plasma & Gnome as well.)
I tried Hyprland a few months ago like this. I had Plasma installed then installed hyprland as well. During login with SDDM you can select which DE to launch.
Edit: On github it says you should install it alone to make sure. I dont know then, maybe it works? I am still new to Linux as well.
I have had it installed for a while and I check it after every update. I can't use it yet as my daily driver because of scaling issues. The desktop scales properly but windows do not. Fonts are too small and the cursor is tiny. I figured out how to scale the cursor manually but I couldnt scale the windows.
The COPR package didn't work for me on Nobara, so I had to build from source, but it works great. There are a couple of things I don't like, but overall seems pretty neat.
If I can get Xwayland to work nicely for steam with high refresh rates, then it seems like this might be the WM for me until COSMIC-DE comes out.
The newest Wayland compositor on the scene with its first stable release is Niri, a scrollable-tiling Wayland compositor inspired by the PaperWM GNOME Shell extesnsion.
The Niris v0.1 Wayland compositor positions all windows into an infinite horizontal strip that scrolls left and right.
Niri v0.1 supports multiple monitors, mixed GPU systems, HiDPI displays, dynamic workspaces, screencasting support via the GNOME XDG Desktop portal, live-reloading configuration system, a configurable layout, and other features that are off to a good start for this compositor.
Here are some screenshots of Niri v0.1 in action provided by this open-source project:
Niri v0.1 is available in source form as well as packages via community repositories for Fedora COPR, NixOS Flake, Arch Linux AUR package, and also a FreeBSD port.
Downloads and more details on the Niri v0.1 release via GitHub.
The original article contains 135 words, the summary contains 135 words. Saved 0%. I'm a bot and I'm open source!
Going through the GitHub page for the bot, it seems that this is intended behavior by the dev. In their own words:
I think it still serves its purpose of people not having to leave the community to see what the article is about.
I agree with this, personally, as I don't like having to follow links to read articles. It's nice having a comment with a TL;DR, or for very short articles having the whole article in the comments. Plus, it's not like one (relatively short) comment really adds bloat to the comments section, it's something that can be easily scrolled past.