this post was submitted on 20 Feb 2026
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    [–] PotatoesFall@discuss.tchncs.de 2 points 10 hours ago (1 children)

    I think most window managers typically come with just a fee GUI apps preinstalled, but most users install more.

    [–] Limerance@piefed.social 3 points 5 hours ago (1 children)

    Most window managers come with no GUI apps. They don’t even have a launcher (start menu), status bar, notification area, wifi menu, task bar, dock, etc.

    For most window managers you pick and choose a shell, launcher, etc, to combine it with. Then you configure all those separate tools and the window manager to your liking

    There are preconfigured packages, distros, and scripts that make sensible choices for this already. Even they usually don’t bring a lot of applications with them.

    Omarchy brings a lot of applications in their default install. Check out this uninstall script to get an idea. KDEnlive is a KDE application, gnome-calculator, nautilus, gnome-diskutil, gnome-keyring are GNOME. Chromium is GTK too, I actually don’t know if LibreOffice is. So not many I would dare say. Others ship less.

    Dank Linux, a full features shell for Niri, Wayland, mangowc describes it pretty well.

    Batteries Included

    The age of assembling your desktop from dozens of separate tools and spending hours trying to make it feel cohesive is over. While traditional Wayland setups require you to hunt down, configure, and maintain a sprawling collection of utilities, Dank Linux delivers everything in one cohesive package with minimal dependencies.

    The Traditional Way: Package Hunting Simulator

    A typical Hyprland, niri, Sway, MangoWC, dwl, labwc, Miracle WM, or generic Wayland setup forces you to learn about and configure a dozen or more separate tools, such as:

    • Status Bar: waybar, eww, or custom scripts
    • Notifications: mako, swaync, or dunst
    • App Launcher: rofi, wofi, fuzzel, or tofi
    • Screen Locking: swaylock, hyprlock, or gtklock
    • Idle Management: swayidle, hypridle
    • System Tools: htop, btop, nm-applet, blueman, pavucontrol
    • Audio Control: pavucontrol, pamixer scripts
    • Brightness Control: brightnessctl with custom bindings
    • Clipboard Manager: clipman, cliphist, or wl-clipboard scripts
    • Wallpaper Management: swaybg, swww, hyprpaper, or wpaperd
    • Theming: manually configuring gtk, qt, various apps, bars, compositor gaps and colors
    • Power Management: custom scripts or additional daemons
    • Greeter: gdm, sddm, lightdm, greetd

    Each tool has its own configuration format, its own quirks, and its own dependencies. You'll spend hours writing glue scripts, debugging integration issues, and discovering missing functionality at the worst possible moments.

    [–] clay_pidgin@sh.itjust.works 1 points 4 hours ago

    That was my experience when I briefly tried a TWM, the parts bin approach is very cool but I need my computer to work NOW, I can't take two weeks to play with it. A package sounds good...