I was planning on having a gruvbox-ish red color as the window border, however at the moment I had to settle for this color because the GTK theme I’m using has a weird focus ring of its own and I’m yet to figure out how to get rid of it.
Dotfiles: https://github.com/eeriemyxi/dotfiles
I’m using Waybar for the system bar. It should work on most Wayland compositors.
Ah, neat. I’m using that too but I’m fairly new to it, as I haven’t used it for many years. Do you mind sharing your config for it?
Eventually I’m going to push it my dotfiles Git repository, but right now I’m still figuring out the theming so it’s not up yet.
Alright, cool, no rush. If you remember me, let me know, if you want. 😊
I’m almost there, I think. I’ll let you know in an hour or two.
Alright. I pushed the changes to remote.
NOTE: Waybar has a built-in module for showing temperature, it’s just that I couldn’t make it work for me and that’s why I have a custom module to show CPU temperature. I recommend that you try the built-in one first (since it might work on your machine) for more minimal setup.
Much appreciated! I’ll use this as a sort of reference while I’m combing through the Waybar wiki and configuring my own. 😊👍
One thing I’m eager to get working is to somehow animate switching workspaces. I have my workspaces looking like little pills right now. Small, round circles. But I want the selected workspace to kind of expand and stretch into an elongated pill upon being selected.
Would you happen to know if this is at all possible or is it not worth attempting because it wouldn’t be supported?
I played with GTK’s transitions a bit, but they don’t seem to support scaling-related transitions, so I don’t think you’ll be able to do that.
I was able to make a simple one: https://files.catbox.moe/okh3zc.mp4
Ah okay, that’s a shame. Thanks for your above and beyond effort in answering my question! 😄❤️
Waybar uses GTK stylesheets for the theming. In theory, GTK CSS does have support for transitions and animations, which could be used in your case. But I’d say it’s a hard sell still. That aside I’ve never tried them in GTK, so I wouldn’t know if they even work in practice or how far.
I think you have a shot at this with
eww
instead. But it’s harder to work with and you’ll need to make somewhat complex scripts I’d imagine.Uh huh! 😆 I was running i3 for like a decade before very recently, and a couple of years ago I got tired of the limitations of polybar and I basically rewrote all of its functionality and the modules and behavior I wanted beyond that, in eww widgets. Took me a few months to get everything the way I wanted to have it, with rich media control widgets and weather widgets and i3 workspace control and styling and, and, and.
It was super possible! But it was clunky for sure. Lots of supporting scripts and lots of strongly coupled integration of those scripts and manually refreshing eww state data in my i3 config bindings.
I’ve been eyeing Aylur’s Astral widget system as well, but I’m a little hesitant that it’ll be more of the same—configuration by programming (which is fine), with big gains in functionality, but with little gain in terms of appearance.
Yesterday I heard of https://quickshell.outfoxxed.me/ but have never tried it myself. They have some pretty decent examples of widgets on their homepage. I think they have their own little langauge called QML which appears to be turing-complete.
Maybe that’s what you’re missing.