Not sure if I'll remove these again. All I know is that I'll no longer
have to worry about not having certain dotfiles if I want to try a
particular setup again, which is nice.
tint2 is a great piece of software that I enjoyed playing with, however
it is drastically easier and more convenient to simply use dash-to-panel
in GNOME if you're looking for that traditional taskbar-like experience.
As a bonus, such a taskbar would work under both Xorg and Wayland, have
features such as preview on hover, and won't have anti-features such as
the bar not being clickable unless you perform Xorg shenanigans.
This was the configuration I used for tint2 when I was trying to
replicate a taskbar-like experience in bspwm. Although it worked to some
extent, the dash-to-panel extension for GNOME handles this much nicer,
and with the many other benefits GNOME provides.
For history's sake, I'm including how I changed the color scheme of
tint2 with wal. Note that I don't use tint2 anymore since I realized
that what I was trying to do with tint2 can already be achieved much
easier and much more polished with GNOME extensions.