| > Because it needs special support in the window manager. At that point it is the same as what Wayland is doing except it still has all the other flaws of X11 and it will break when someone wants to disable compositing or use another old window manager. But it also does not rely on Wayland and all the flaws it has - after all my point was about being possible on X11, not about Wayland. Wayland had nothing to do with the post i wrote. > But that is not a good experience for users, the point of it working seamlessly is to have support for it built into the window manager. Yes, which is exactly what i wrote in my original message: "Window manager support for some common messages/hints (ala EWMH) so that the window manager is responsible for telling applications how to scale would improve things". > There are no clarifications to ask, you are repeating the same comments that get posted all the time [...] If your comment follows this pattern then I would say just avoid making that comment I suggest try to actual read what people are writing instead of trying to pattern match answers to whatever you think the poster is writing. This may also help understand what i write in my other replies about backwards compatibility. |
Well my point was that it will always be an inferior experience on X11 even though it technically is possible in some circumstance. WM hints only work correctly if the window manager is compositing which many window managers are not, or do not want to add, and some X11 users still seem to insist on not using them... Any attempts to add this to X11 are fighting an uphill battle.
>I suggest try to actual read what people are writing
I did and I believe those replies are following those patterns. Those comments seem unrelated to the other things about backwards compatibility. It is an entirely separate concern.