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  2. i3 (window manager) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I3_(window_manager)

    i3 is a tiling window manager designed for X11, inspired by wmii and written in C. [5] It supports tiling, stacking, and tabbing layouts, which are handled manually. Its configuration is achieved via a plain text file and extending i3 is possible using its Unix domain socket and JSON based IPC interface from many programming languages.

  3. Tiling window manager - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tiling_window_manager

    Tile Vertically or Show Windows Side by Side Tile Horizontally or Show Windows Stacked. The first version (Windows 1.0) featured a tiling window manager, partly because of litigation by Apple claiming ownership of the overlapping window desktop metaphor. But due to complaints, the next version (Windows 2.0) followed the desktop metaphor.

  4. Stacking window manager - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stacking_window_manager

    Microsoft Windows 1.0 displayed windows using a tiling window manager. In Windows 2.0 , it was replaced with a stacking window manager, which allowed windows to overlap. Microsoft kept the stacking window manager up through Windows XP , which presented severe limitations to its ability to display 3D-accelerated content inside normal windows.

  5. Dynamic window manager - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dynamic_window_manager

    The main area usually shows one window, but one can also change the number of windows in this area. Its purpose is to reserve more space for the more important window(s). The secondary area shows the other windows. Tiling window managers that don't use layouts are called manual tiling window managers. They let the user decide where windows ...

  6. Category:Tiling window managers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Tiling_window...

    Tiling window managers are window managers that support the organization of the screen into mutually non-overlapping frames, as opposed to the more popular approach of coordinate-based stacking of overlapping objects . See tiling window manager.

  7. Compositing window manager - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compositing_window_manager

    Compositing managers may perform additional processing on buffered windows, applying 2D and 3D animated effects such as blending, fading, scaling, rotation, duplication, bending and contortion, shuffling, blurring, redirecting applications, and translating windows into one of a number of displays and virtual desktops.

  8. Features new to Windows 11 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Features_new_to_Windows_11

    Themes: In addition to new default themes on Windows 11 for both Light and Dark mode, it also includes four new additional themes. Windows 11 also adds new high-contrast themes for people with visual impairments. Sounds: Windows 11 introduces a new set of system sounds. The sounds are slightly different depending on whether the theme is set to ...

  9. X window manager - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X_window_manager

    Unlike MacOS Classic, macOS, and Microsoft Windows platforms (excepting Microsoft Windows explorer.exe shell replacements), which have historically provided a vendor-controlled, fixed set of ways to control how windows and panes display on a screen, and how the user may interact with them, window management for the X Window System was ...