this post was submitted on 21 Nov 2023
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Hey guys, I've been running Mint on my home computer for a little while now and I'm having a great time, however there's one behaviour from Windows I'm missing. When you hit win + arrows to snap the currently focussed window to the left or right half of the screen, windows will present a dialogue to select a companion window for the other half of the screen from your other floating windows. Does anyone know how best to implement something like this? I tried a tiling WM like i3, but that's a bit more... involved than what I'm looking for. Thanks!

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[–] PainInTheAES 6 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Probably not what you're looking for but this behavior works very well on KDE Plasma.

[–] 1111 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I'm not tied to anything at this stage, but I don't have a lot of free time for trying different stuff. Can I install this DE alongside cinnamon, like I have with i3?

[–] PainInTheAES 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Kind of... The problem with full DEs like GNOME and KDE is that they pull in a lot of dependencies and make a lot of changes. So it can break visuals or change icons in each others environments or install apps with duplicate functions. Something like i3 has a lot less clutter because it expects the user to build their own environment.

The best way to try out KDE would be to install it under a new user on your system so it doesn't conflict with your original home directory. Or you could boot up a live image of Kubuntu or some other KDE flavored Linux distro and mess around with it a bit to see if you want to commit to it.

While you can install KDE on mint without issues (apt install kde-plasma-desktop) I would recommend installing a KDE focused distro because sometimes they have better default configs.

But Plasma should be able to do win + arrow keys out of the box and current versions of Plasma should have basic tiling functions by dragging a window around and holding shift. If there's anything you don't like it's a very configurable platform.