Makes things simple and avoids having multiple ways to do the same
thing (launch applications).
Note that two dots are used here since at some point I presumably made
a wrapper inside a wrapper, which should probably be fixed later.
Instead of remembering which workspace an application is in, it's easier
to simply go to the previous or next workspace until reaching the desired
application.
This has the advantage of less keybinds used and no longer having to reach
across the keyboard when dealing with 6 or more workspaces.
Workspace state can be handled by ironbar's launcher instead, which has
the additional benefit of guaranteeing that you see all open applications.
hyprland-relative-workspace is used here for a GNOME-like workspace
experience. Hyprland's built-in m+1/m-1 would cycle the workspaces
instead of opening an empty one, and the recently merged r+1/r-1 does
not skip empty workspaces in-between other workspaces.
This was mainly useful on smaller screens where window contents took up
less space overall, however this makes it non-trivial to determine
whether or not gaps are enabled unless two or more windows exist in the
same workspace.
Since the gaps aren't an issue with larger screen sizes anyway, slightly
reducing gaps and disabling no_gaps_when_only seems like the play here.
This fixes an issue where fullscreen windows would previously cause swww
and other background image setters to not show backgrounds until a
gesture animation was completed.
pqiv is an image viewer that, unlike feh, has native support for
Wayland, which makes working with it quite nice. It also supports
showing a thumbnail mode that lets you preview and switch between
images with ease, as well as the ability to run custom commands
based on the current image.
pqiv has more features than imv *and* anti-aliasing *actually works*,
making it an ideal choice for image viewing on Wayland. After years of
using feh, I am quite happy that I found pqiv.
The previous commit didn't actually work, and I shouldn't need to
change the variables often, so it's much simpler to not have them.
In the event that I do need to change something, rg and sd should get
the job done well.
It seems like all wine windows may be broken, although there doesn't
seem to be an easy way to allow the resizing of all wine windows without
affecting other windows. In practice this *shouldn't* matter much,
however.