"Not happening, because xmonad is too tightly tied to X11. No matter how hard you try, the result would not be compatible with xmonad, its contribs, or any configs.
Significant parts of xmonad are also not applicable to Weston because they are no longer part of the window manager component; they were moved to the compositor or application level themes, etc."
Sway is a drop-in replacement for the i3 window manager, but for Wayland instead of X11. It works with your existing i3 configuration and supports most of i3's features, and a few extras.
Sway is a great project. I use it on a laptop with Intel graphics. I've tried to use it elsewhere, but I've found that the limiting factor is everything else -- applications that are still using X11 (supported under Wayland but often with surprising behavior), drivers that don't support Wayland, or don't support it properly, and the general immaturity of the Wayland world. Wayland is the graphics equivalent of PulseAudio circa 2009: clearly the way of the future, on an upward trajectory, but still experiencing growing pains and making a lot of people angry.
"Not happening, because xmonad is too tightly tied to X11. No matter how hard you try, the result would not be compatible with xmonad, its contribs, or any configs.
Significant parts of xmonad are also not applicable to Weston because they are no longer part of the window manager component; they were moved to the compositor or application level themes, etc."
i3 has sway http://swaywm.org/
Sway is a drop-in replacement for the i3 window manager, but for Wayland instead of X11. It works with your existing i3 configuration and supports most of i3's features, and a few extras.