well, if we DO have one, it's old and i hate it
![Mad :x](./images/smilies/icon_mad.gif)
![Mad :x](./images/smilies/icon_mad.gif)
![Mad :x](./images/smilies/icon_mad.gif)
![Mad :x](./images/smilies/icon_mad.gif)
post your stuff!
"dirty" gliders
![Image](http://nvsbl.org/etc/2015-04-23-160041_3840x1200_scrot.png)
"clean"
![Image](http://nvsbl.org/etc/2015-04-23-161647_3840x1200_scrot.png)
I typically do yes. Specifically, these are separate instances of xterm. Sometimes I'll use tabs in vim (tabedit, gt, gT) and my usual diffing tool is vimdiff which uses a split. But, since I have tiling window manager and am used to the way it splits and shuffles windows, I usually let the window manager do its job.ramnes wrote: ↑Is that me or you open a new terminal window for each vim XMIT?
you don't really need to know C at all to use dwm, or lua for awesome, or haskell for xmonad. you can use it straight out of the box just fine, but if you want to change things, the config file is just a bit confusing without [$lang]. if you have edited config files of more than one format, then you should be fine as long as you can pick up on the syntax and then type make & && make install.Madhias wrote: ↑I have again installed Linux, namely Arch, only because I want to have such an awesome looking desktop. But which window manager to choose? I heard awesome is a PITA when updating, for dwm I need to know C, for XMonad I have to learn Haskell, so I think I'll go for now with i3. Or Openbox?
XMIT wrote: ↑...I still use a single Dell 3007WFP-HC 2560x1600 LCD from 2007.