The virtual desktops there are usually just a single stack behind the scenes, and they are not per screen, so working with those platforms and expensive window manager tools has been always a pain for me. On MacOS and Windows, on the other hand, I don't see a chance of this working anyhow. If I need a new virtual desktop on the fly, I just create one without any repercussions for the rest of the layout (or stack).Īnd I think that's the key concept of tiling WMs: user choice. I usually have 10+ virtual desktops, because I use 3 screens, and each of them has a different set of virtual desktops - which are also not bound to a specific screen and can be moved to another screen just as easily. It's because they let the user decide what layout and how many virtual desktops they need. ![]() The point why i3 / sway on Linux are used so much is not that they have a specific layouting concept.
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