this post was submitted on 28 Jun 2023
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Thanks man. That is both a relief and a shock for me.
Debian unser actually prefer it this way?
I think the safer generalization to make is that the Gnome 3 project leaders prefer it that way.
Debian just doesn't tweak it, likely in favor of increased stability.
As the other user also pointed out, it's not Debian but rather the Gnomeproject that is by default pushing this workflow and look-and-feel style. If you try Fedora or Archlinux for instance, you will also find the same Gnome desktop (with a different wallpaper). That said,
dash-to-dock
is one of the most famous and installed extensions, so this means that many users prefer that workflow, but many also apparently just use gnome without a dock. When I was using Gnome, just for reference, I had dash-to-dock, but most of the times when I needed to launch an application I would just use the shortcut to open the search menu (which coming from KDE I remapped to alt + space)I also use dash-to-dock, but, generally, I just hit the super key and type what I want to run. So not too far off from the native workflow. I mostly like the dock as a way to, at a glance, keep tabs on what I have open, and what needs my attention. Opening a separate context menu for that functionally seems unwieldy at best.