![]() ![]() I can take a window and have it fill 2 zones. Taking things one step further, the last alteration applies to both of those scenarios. Then the other two supporting windows are narrower, but not too narrow to be useless (see screenshot below). The first is an alteration on my default, but giving the centre window more space, about 55% of the screen. This isn’t perfect for all scenarios, so back to my desire for choice and flexibility, I have additional layout options. This is my default layout, splitting my screen equally across 3 windows. ![]() ![]() This may be what I’m writing right now in MarkText, with Firefox to the left for quick searches and the thing I’m talking about on the right (see screenshot below). I always want my main app right in front of me, bang in the centre of my screen, with secondary supporting apps around that. As Linux is my main daily driver, I will start there, then follow on with Windows. My setup works for both Windows and Linux, with different benefits and flexibilities to each. I want more choice, more flexibility, to empower my scenario. Two apps can defocus the main app that I’m using when split down the middle 50/50. Additionally, with an UltraWide monitor a single app can be stretched too far. However, I often feel too restricted, too trapped, and fumbling around with the appropriate hotkeys. Tiling window managers are very interesting in their default abilities to arrange windows in a fixed fashion. This is a post discussing the ways you can optimise your windows within a DE.Īs a user of an UltraWide 21:9 monitor I am a fan of having multiple windows on screen at once. This is not a post on which Desktop Environment is finally going to rule them all! That conversation is happening elsewhere and I suspect will never end. ![]() □ ultrawide 219 gtile autohotkey window-tiling ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |