this post was submitted on 11 Aug 2025
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    [–] Ascend910@lemmy.ml 4 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) (1 children)
    1. Browser, other main stuff
    2. Games, games never leaves 2
    3. Terminal, ide, file manager
    4. Blender, libre office, teams, cad, lmms, davenci resolve
    5. Virtual box, vmware, virtmanager
    6. Moonlight, parsec, vnc, rdp.
      7-9 when I run out of space in my other desktops
    7. Music player, obs, uget, qbittorrent, xclicker, discord
    [–] Sxan@piefed.zip 2 points 3 days ago

    Lordy.

    I've always used virtual desktops, but my life changed when I realized I could chain tags in herbstluftwm. Now I have music player, visualize, & todos always on monitor 1. Then I have Meta-[1-5] bound to switch monitors 2 & 3 in sync between virtual workspaces:

    1: programming, web on 2, editor on 3 2: remote, terminals into VPSes and LAN computers, and gotop 3: communications, IM chats on 2, email, Matrix, irc, discourse, SMS bridge on 3 4; random, Factorio or movie on 3, and often Vial on 2, because. 5: more random, usually Darktable, Gimp, Inkscape or some combination depending.

    I don't have 6-9 bound, because 4 or 5 are usually free for whatever.

    [–] tal 4 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) (1 children)

    Tier 1: Linux virtual consoles. Switch among these with Alt-F1 through Alt-F8. Control-Alt instead of Alt if in Wayland. I have seven with a text terminal and Wayland on the eighth. This tier supports showing only one virtual console at once.

    Tier 2: Inside the Wayland virtual terminal, Sway managing virtual desktops. I use nonstandard keybindings here: Super-1 and -2 to cycle left and right, and Super-Q n to go to the n-th desktop. Beyond the first ten desktops, I can use Super-R to rename a desktop to a "named" desktop. For cycling purposes, these come after the first ten. This tier supports showing only one desktop at once.

    Tier 3: Inside a Sway virtual desktop, windows managed by Sway. This tier supports splitting, showing multiple windows at once. I use nonstandard emacs-style keybindings, Super-F/B/N/P to move among those. These are often running a virtual terminal program, foot. I don't use a multiplexing terminal with multiple "tabs", because I favor a more minimalist setup with fewer tiers.

    Tier 4: Inside a Sway-managed window, mosh. This tier isn't always present; I only use this tier if I'm using a remote system. Mosh has its own concept of sessions. These can be used in conjunction with Tmux's sessions


    mosh's system is designed to smooth over connectivity issues. Lose network connectivity and mosh will display a message. Hibernate a laptop for a month with a mosh connection open to another machine, open the lid, and mosh will transparently re-establish its connections as if there had been no interruption. I mostly use mosh to reduce perceived latency, but the connectivity stuff is neat. Not much interaction with this tier, short of force-exiting with Control-^ . and this tier only supports showing one session in a terminal at once.

    Tier 5: Inside a mosh session, tmux sessions. Tmux has its own set of sessions, which one can attach to with tmux attach. This tier only supports showing one session at once.

    Tier 6: Inside a tmux session, tmux windows. I use a nonstandard prefix key for tmux (and GNU screen) to reduce friction with emacs


    Control-O. I use emacs-style keybindings to cycle among windows


    Control-O Control-N/Control-P. This tier does support splitting to show multiple tmux windows at once, though I don't use that functionality.

    Tier 7: Inside a tmux window, I run a bash shell process. Bash supports job control. Control-Z to suspend the current job and return to bash, jobs to list jobs, fg %n to activate the nth job.

    Tier 8: Inside a bash job, I might be running emacs, and that has emacs frames. If you're using graphical emacs, each frame corresponds to a window in your windowing environment. In terminal emacs, each is basically another invisible layer that you can switch among. C-x 5 2 to create a new frame, C-x 5 o to cycle, C-x 5 0 to destroy. This tier does not support showing multiple frames at once.

    Tier 9: Emacs buffers. Each "buffer" might be a text file, a email client with mu4e, an LLM chat session with ellama, a "spreadsheet" with an org-mode table, whatever. One can show multiple emacs windows and assign a buffer to each emacs window (emacs has its own concept of windows, which kinda correspond to "panes" in most programs). Emacs has many systems for switching among these, but I mostly use one of two fairly vanilla add-on packages, either C-x b for ido-switch-buffer to switch among buffers using tab-completing names, or C-x C-b to use ibuffer, which provides menu-based selection.

    Tier 10: Usually not something I use in conjunction with emacs, but if one is running a bash instance in an emacs shell-mode buffer (M-x shell), then bash's job control comes into the picture. Emacs shell-mode requires one to prefix each bash control key sequence with C-c, so C-c C-z to suspend the current job, and return to shell, jobs to list current jobs, and fg %n to activate the n-th job. Can only show one job at once.

    EDIT: You could maybe make an argument that there's another tier between Tier 7 and Tier 8, because I use an emacs feature called desktop.el that persists an emacs session, including its frames and windows and open buffers and all across invocations of emacs for a given project. But I rarely use this, so it's not normally in the stack. If it's there, you can only have one active at once, no "split desktop.el" functionality.

    EDIT2: I take it back. I had workspace renaming set up in i3, but never pulled that configuration over when I switched to sway. So just the basic 10 workspaces.

    [–] riskable@programming.dev 2 points 3 days ago

    Crank that knob up to 11: Using multiple computers simultaneously to manage all your shitβ€”with some having special hardware dedicated to the task!

    This is the way

    If you swap one and four, That's how I use the monitors on my desktop

    [–] iveseenthat@reddthat.com 3 points 3 days ago (5 children)

    You sick! Media players go on workspace 10!

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    [–] UnityDevice@lemmy.zip 1 points 3 days ago

    The thing I'm supposed to be doing is on workspace 3...

    [–] randint@lemmy.frozeninferno.xyz 1 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago)

    not sure if a virtual desktop is the same thing as workspaces in Gnome, but what I do is I only really open one window in one workspace. The first window I open since system startup goes into the first workspace, etc. Usually the first one is the browser (Librewolf).

    I typically keep three virtual desktops, one "main" one with what I'm working on, a second one with communications, like email and slack and whatnot, and another as basically blank space to put stuff that I need open but doesn't have anywhere to go.

    [–] Shipgirlboy@sh.itjust.works 2 points 3 days ago (2 children)

    I used to be a virtual desktop user just like you, but then I plugged a second monitor into the pc

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    [–] KazuchijouNo@lemy.lol 2 points 3 days ago

    Desktop 1 is for my music, browser, socials, maybe a yt video.

    Desktop 2 is my work windows VM with spreadsheets and stuff

    i use wm so workspaces. I have them as:

    1. WEB: to spawn all web browsers. Clicking a link in a terminal or a pdf will open a tab or a new browser here.

    2. TERM: to spawn all terminal applications and processes: Htop, ssh, vim windows to edit stuff...etc.

    3. CODE: for GUI code editors like CodeBlocks, VSCode, Emacs. Yes I do use Vim but I prefer the full functions from these.

    4. FILE: any file managers, e.g. pcmanfm, thunar, ranger...etc. I mostly use only one (pcmanfm) and use this workspace when I need to view complicate folder structures.

    5. PDF: I read a lot of papers so usually qpdfview owns this worlspace. I used to have Mendeley here as well.

    6. MEDIA: so any VLC, mplayer will spawn here

    7. TODO: usually some notes I put down on a text editor will show here.

    8. OTHER: the rest.

    [–] Addv4@lemmy.world 2 points 3 days ago

    And if it's long standing then throw stuff from 4 on 10.

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