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Company Overview

Sway is a drop-in replacement for the i3 window manager, but for Wayland instead of X11.

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Company Information

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Features & Specs

  • Wayland Compatibility

    Sway is a compositor for Wayland, providing better performance and security compared to the X11 system.

  • i3 Compatibility

    Sway is designed to be compatible with i3 window manager configurations, making it easy for i3 users to transition.

  • Lightweight

    Sway is known for being lightweight and efficient, using fewer system resources compared to other compositors.

  • Customizability

    Similar to i3, Sway offers extensive customization options for users to tailor their environment.

  • Active Development

    Sway has an active development community, ensuring regular updates, bug fixes, and new features.

  • Enhances Security

    Being built on Wayland, Sway provides better isolation of processes, improving overall system security.

  • Videos

    External Sources including reviews & comparisons

    Sway is a free, open-source, and lightweight tiling Wayland i3-compatible window manager that automatically arranges app windows to logically maximize desktop space. It arranges windows into a grid by default and supports almost all the commands included in i3.
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    Social Recommendations


    • Pomodoro Timer: Waybar and uair

      I am currently using uair integrated in to my Waybar running on my sway window manager. I use it similar to the way I use watson (both as a CLI tool with Waybar integrations), so it is a good fit for me.

      – Source: dev.to
      /
      about 2 months ago


    • “We understand” 😉

      This is partially why I use tools like i3 (/ sway). I like the tool; it works extremely well for me; the design has stayed the same for 20 years; there’s no profit motive to come along and fuck everything up. It just works. It is boring in the best way possible.

      Source:
      10 months ago


    • Framework 13 with AMD Ryzen 7040 Series Makes for a Great Linux Laptop

      I’ve tested using i3 but never fully got into it. But my plan for the F13 is to try out Hyprland[0] and perhaps Sway[1]. [0] https://hyprland.org/ [1] https://swaywm.org/.

      – Source: Hacker News
      /
      10 months ago


    • Rethinking Window Management in Gnome

      Sway does all those things very well: https://swaywm.org/.

      – Source: Hacker News
      /
      about 1 year ago


    • Just ran Sway on openSUSE. Complete noob. I need help.

      Read the manual on https://swaywm.org/. There are tons of youtube videos showcasing basic configuration and usage. This is extremely basic stuff you need to do yourself.

      Source:
      over 1 year ago


    • Thinking about doing distro hop after half a year any recommendations?

      While both the Pop Shell and Material shell extensions offer very easy access to window tiling on GNOME, they’re not as powerful as the likes of Sway or Hyprland.

      Source:
      over 1 year ago


    • tiling window manager

      If I wanted to run a tiling WM now I’d try out sway, which bills itself as a drop-in replacement for i3 on Wayland.

      Source:
      over 1 year ago


    • Asahi Linux To Users: Please Stop Using X.Org

      Sway is supposed to be a drop-in replacement for i3. And they’re probably the biggest outside of Gnome and KDE, so the support should be pretty good — they maintain wlroots, which is what all the smaller Wayland compositors use.

      Source:
      over 1 year ago


    • My full desktop mode rice. Replaced KDE with i3 and mapped everything I need to use it to controls with steam input.

      If you like i3, you might want to try https://swaywm.org/.

      Source:
      over 1 year ago


    • Switching between desktop mode and game mode restarts?

      I got fed up enough that I put a launcher for a “Desktop Mode” inside gaming mode. (I actually use use a tiling window manager called Sway instead of KDE because I’ve always felt I wasn’t a real Linux dude if I didn’t have rice).

      Source:
      over 1 year ago


    • Why Use Linux?

      Here’s another big one. I have an inflammatory condition that occasionally makes using a mouse painful and a trackpad very inaccurate. On a Mac, I’m just screwed. On Windows, I’m more screwed than I used to be (through XP, Windows was completely navigable via the keyboard, as was Office). On BSD or Linux, I can replace the GUI with programs like Sway or i3, which not only makes the UI more keyboard-friendly,…

      Source:
      over 1 year ago


    • Linux vs. Mac

      – iCloud sync. I use an iPhone and frequently make use of iMessage, photos, and clipboard syncing between devices. I know that you can replicate a lot of that with Android and Linux, but at this point I’m pretty deep in Apple’s ecosystem and am unlikely to switch away anytime soon. The biggest thing I miss is having a good tiling window manager experience. I have a desktop running Sway[0] and really love it. I’ve…

      – Source: Hacker News
      /
      over 1 year ago


    • I3 Lock Blur

      I know this is gonna be downvoted, but if you decide to move to sway in the future, you have swaylock-effects to do exactly that.

      Source:
      over 1 year ago


    • Replacing Win 11 with Arch on my laptop

      Once you start w/the Tiling WMs, everything else seems bloated and ineffecient. I3WM makes it easy to test Wayland too as ou can fire up a SWAY session instead and it will use your I3 configs.

      Source:
      over 1 year ago


    • anyone knows how can i get waydroid running on i3

      If you really want to use waydroid then you can give Sway a go. It’s an i3 drop-in replacement for Wayland.

      Source:
      over 1 year ago


    • Can I get rid of my desktop environment and run programs from the terminal?

      Have a look at a tiling window manager such as sway On that website you can see a small demo video, I think this is most likely what you are looking for.

      Source:
      over 1 year ago


    • Why didn’t i discover this earlier

      i3wm is completely xorg based so Firefox is unable to use wayland client(don’t get me wrong Firefox xorg client also works fine and completely usable), however there is sway wm if you want, which is wayland based and this trick will work.

      Source:
      over 1 year ago


    • Elementary OS 7

      I have noticed in one of your comments in this thread that you are looking for novel ideas of the UI look. As others commenters stated, you might be interested in tiling window managers like i3 [0] or sway [1]. They are truly a gem for productivity and sometimes for an eye [2]. However, I love the concept of scrollable window manager like PaperWM [3] is. When I had a smaller screen (24″ 16:9) I was complaining a…

      – Source: Hacker News
      /
      over 1 year ago


    • Anyone here use tiling window managers?

      Hi! HHKB user since 2004. Linux user since ’95. I’ve been using tiling window managers for about 20 years. I’ve tried a few. Ratpoison first, then ion, then xmonad, then spectrwm (which is my favourite), but since I moved to wayland a couple of years ago, I’ve settled on sway (https://swaywm.org/). Meta-Return spawns a terminal (https://codeberg.org/dnkl/foot, which is blazingly fast, using very little resources)….

      Source:
      over 1 year ago


    • Manjaro i3 user thinking of trying out Gnome looking for a bit of help

      GNOME is great but it’ll never behave like i3. If you want something similar to i3 that works on Wayland, you’ve got Sway.

      Source:
      almost 2 years ago


    • Window size & placement [Wayland/GNOME]

      If you don’t specifically care about using gnome you can probably still run some gnome services but just use sway/wlroots as your window manager/wayland compositor and use command criteria to assign windows to specific workspace and resize and move them, and configure keybindings or use sway-msg cli tool to manually arrange.

      Source:
      almost 2 years ago

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