![]() There are a ton of great window manager (Magnet is still one of the common ones around which you brought up, but Mosaic is my favorite. There is a little confusion as most macOS users are not familiar with the difference between a window manager and a window tiling manager. Considering MBPs and am not sure (moving from Arch Linux on Lenovo X1 Carbon Gen 7).The mouse layer is largely novelty but if the cursor is close the I will use it as realigning my fingers with keyboard is annoying. Two shift layers I will replace with shit + function and alt + function keys. ![]() One one the fact I type using the colemak-dhm layout. How i have used 9 layers of the keyboard (for those who wonder why anyone needs that many layers What are the benefits of using Linux over other operating systems? It is no different than having to install, say, Gnome to have a desktop on Linux. You just had to install a third-party application for that. You could totally have virtual desktops since Windows 98. This can be useful if you encounter an app that is still able to draw above the Visor even with "Show on top of the Dock" enabled.Windows is not bad - it's a matter of familiarityįor instance, many Linux users bash (sic) Windows because it only supported virtual desktops since very recent versions (8, I think). A new Visor-related Tweakable flag was added: ~/.totalfinder-useaggressivevisordrawpriority will set the Visor window to a much higher draw priority when the "Show on top of the Dock" feature is enabled.(※ Replace the 1 with a 0 to disable the feature.) This experimental feature is currently only accessible by running defaults write TotalFinderVisorDrawAboveOtherAppsWhenPinned 1 in a Terminal session. Added an experimental feature that allows users to make the Visor show above other apps, but not the Dock whenever the Visor is in a pinned state.The newly-added Tweakable flag ~/.totalfinder-disablelabelcolourlookupoptimisation disables all Coloured Labels lookup optimisations, which may be useful as a troubleshooting or debugging step.The newly-added Tweakable flag ~/.totalfinder-alwaysenablenewlabellookupmethods enables the new Coloured Labels lookup logic on macOS 12 Monterey and below, which normally use a different label colour lookup method that no longer works as of macOS 13 Ventura.Certain behaviour flags that were used during the testing of the new Coloured Labels logic are now controllable via TotalFinder's power-user-oriented "Tweakables" feature, which you can use by creating specific files in your home directory (~, or $) using the command-line utility touch.Various other internal refactors and improvements were made to TotalFinder as a whole.Made many improvements to the TotalFinder diagnostics utility (diagnose-totalfinder.sh) that improve the usefulness of its output.Major internal refactors were made to the Coloured Labels feature, resulting in better optimisation of label colour lookup operations.Fixed a rendering issue where the TotalFinder icon in the Finder preferences on macOS 11 Big Sur and newer was unable to be tinted by the user's macOS UI tint colour when selected.Fixed a rendering issue where the TotalFinder icon in the Finder preferences on macOS 11 Big Sur and newer would render with aliasing artifacts, especially on non-Retina/HiDPI displays where the issue was very severe. ![]()
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