this post was submitted on 01 Sep 2023
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Distributions include the Linux kernel and supporting system software and libraries, many of which are provided by the GNU Project. Many Linux distributions use the word "Linux" in their name, but the Free Software Foundation uses the name GNU/Linux to emphasize the importance of GNU software, causing some controversy.
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I think, it needs to be said that it doesn't have to be a hard switch. With KDE, you can just install the Wayland session and then when logging in for the first time after booting, you can select whether to start X11 or Wayland. To switch back and forth, you just need to log out and log back in.
With i3, that isn't as simple, since i3 doesn't support Wayland. You'd need to install a WM which supports Wayland + customize it, to be able to switch back and forth.
While it's not as simple as KDE, switching from i3 isn't that hard thanks to Sway. It's a tiling window manager that's intended to be used as a drop-in replacement for i3 on Wayland:
https://swaywm.org/
Sway doesn't have a functional Xwayland implementation insofar as it doesn't handle mixed/high DPI
Ah. I did not realize that. My bad.
What do you mean? I'm using it with a high DPI screen and I don't see anything wrong, Xwailand clients may get a little blurred but that's it
"A little blurred" You are probably one of the fellows who walks around with a phone with a spider web of cracks because it "still works". Not sure why you imagine a blurry screen is a usable or acceptable thing. Excuse me while I return to using my 4k + 4k + 1080p 3 screen arrangement in which NONE of them are blurry and in which an app that is moved from a->b remains the same size because UI elements are scaled to the same identical size.
Honestly it happens with just a few apps, and I try to fix or replace them when I find the time. Also, I don't think that's specific to sway, that's just the way xwayland works
Most people have more thinks to do than fix things that already work.