@[email protected] to [email protected] • 1 year agoIs there something you lack in Wayland but have in xorg?lemmy.worldimagemessage-square240fedilinkarrow-up1703
arrow-up1703imageIs there something you lack in Wayland but have in xorg?lemmy.world@[email protected] to [email protected] • 1 year agomessage-square240fedilink
minus-squareTurboWafflzlinkfedilink11•1 year agoIf you like i3, sway is a drop in replacement for it that uses wayland. I’m not sure if you could make LXQt work with it but it’s worth a shot
minus-squarerumschlumpellinkfedilink4•edit-21 year agoYou cannot, no desktop environment except Gnome and KDE has Wayland support beyond experimental status. If I was content with running no desktop environment at all, I could already do that on Xorg.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink5•1 year agoLast time I checked sway did not support everything in my i3 config file. I’ve been testing wayland for the last decade or so, it never managed to deliver on its promises.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink1•edit-21 year ago sway is a drop in replacement for it that uses wayland IT IS NOT lmao, sway even complains that my i3 keybinds are wrong, those same keybinds work perfectly on i3.
If you like i3, sway is a drop in replacement for it that uses wayland. I’m not sure if you could make LXQt work with it but it’s worth a shot
You cannot, no desktop environment except Gnome and KDE has Wayland support beyond experimental status.
If I was content with running no desktop environment at all, I could already do that on Xorg.
Last time I checked sway did not support everything in my i3 config file. I’ve been testing wayland for the last decade or so, it never managed to deliver on its promises.
IT IS NOT lmao, sway even complains that my i3 keybinds are wrong, those same keybinds work perfectly on i3.