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Linux tiling window managers can supercharge your productivity in several ways. Here's how they work and six I recommend.
For those who've never experienced a tiling window manager, you're in for a treat.
Tiling window managers depend on keyboard shortcuts to interact with the interface. Instead of using the mouse, you use the keyboard to open apps, move windows around, cycle through windows, and just about everything you do on the desktop.
This reliance on the keyboard can prevent new Linux users from adopting a tiling window manager. That's a shame, because although these window managers have a steeper learning curve, they are amazingly efficient.
If you've ever used window snapping on your desktop, imagine it happening automatically. That's what a tiling windows manager does.
Also: I tried Peppermint Linux: How this bare-bones distro lets you build your ideal OS
Window snapping is when you move an application to either the right or left edge of the screen, and the desktop interface automatically "snaps" the window such that it takes up half of your display. Snap another window to the other edge of the display, and it will automatically take up the other half of the screen. If you want a full-screen app, drag the window to the top of your display.