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Alternatives to xquartz for mac
Alternatives to xquartz for mac






  1. #Alternatives to xquartz for mac update#
  2. #Alternatives to xquartz for mac software#
  3. #Alternatives to xquartz for mac free#

When comparing XQuartz and yabai you can also consider the following projects:

#Alternatives to xquartz for mac free#

They are more Linux-like, using config files, free and easy to forget they aren't native.

#Alternatives to xquartz for mac software#

I will end with some more software recommendations: yabai for window management ( ) and skhd for hotkeys ( ) I can't even imagine how I would do that on Linux (surely doable, but nothing beats "already done and usable"), and it's just one of many features like that.

#Alternatives to xquartz for mac update#

In the end, I feel more productive on macOS nowadays, mostly because there are many quality apps to get anything I want done, I don't have to worry that basic OS function will stop working when I update some dependency, and there are some macOS-native features that really improved my workflow.įor example I didn't know how useful Live Text would be until the first time I noticed that Command-F search in Safari also searches text in images, or when I double clicked on a phone number and I could just call it with my iPhone (which was in another room) but keep talking from the MacBook. I was a Windows power user for a few years, and now I use both Linux and macOS daily since 6 years ago. On macOS you don't have this choice, and you have to use apps to get to the workflow you need. On Linux you can choose your own, and you have so many different paradigms. You've actually stumbled upon the least configurable components of macOS: the Window Manager, and the Desktop Environment. They try to dumb everything down, and it helps them in their ultimate goal: get more market share. Indeed, power users are not really what Apple optimizes for. Ask HN: Must have tools for a new MacBook.I also use their Finder (macOS file browser) replacement TotalFinder as it adds some nice touches to how I search and view files on my system. You can quickly switch between desktops when working on different projects and it keeps the clutter down if you like to run a lot of open apps and windows without closing them.

alternatives to xquartz for mac

In conjunction with window managers, I also like TotalSpaces which allows you to customize macOS's typically unique method of creating multiple independent desktops (called Spaces) on the same display and allows you to groups specific apps and windows together to kind of organize your workspace. Definitely takes some setup, but probably nothing you can't handle. Really the only macOS options will be yabai. But since you're coming from Linux, you're used to i3/awm/dwm which actually constantly monitor your open windows and tile all of them so they are all viewable at the same time. Most window apps have all the same or similar features, but Mosaic includes some really advanced layout options that you can save and then trigger via hotkey to automatically resize, reposition, and arrange all your windows exactly how you want them (set to the individual pixel). There are a ton of great window manager (Magnet is still one of the common ones around which you brought up, but Mosaic is my favorite. There is a little confusion as most macOS users are not familiar with the difference between a window manager and a window tiling manager.








Alternatives to xquartz for mac