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Based on our record, tint2 should be more popular than Dash to Dock. It has been mentiond 6 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
From what I understand u'r not rly looking for polybar , it just doesn't suit u (as a person who switched from KDE recently) , I think u'r looking for something like `tint2` , it looks horrible but u can customize it , check this and this. Source: over 1 year ago
Generally the icon of an application is defined by its desktop-entry. The patch Desktopentry serves this purpose. Unfortunately, some programs like tint2 or Alttab can't make use of the desktop-entry and Rely instead on a hardcoded icon which has to be defined by the application Itself with the window-propery _NET_WM_ICON. Since st doesn't define _NET_WM_ICON this programs can't display the correct icon for st... Source: almost 2 years ago
The intersection of people using both StumpWM and the tint2 panel/taskbar is probably pretty small, so I've not a lot of hope, but here's the issue: for whatever reason tint2 will run fine the first time it's started on StumpWM, but restarting it or quitting and running it again doesn't work. If I run it from the commandline I can see that it seems to be starting normally, but it won't actually appear. Any ideas... Source: over 2 years ago
I know about candybar, lemonbar and tint2, I don't know if they have features like this. But can't you just not launch it on the bspwmrc, and then launch it, and kill it when you want with a keybind? Source: almost 3 years ago
The easiest way to have a systray with Spectrwm that I've found is with tint2. Source: almost 3 years ago
My guess would be not many... I know for a fact that at least in my workplace, where most/all dev boxes are running some form of Ubuntu LTS, most of my colleagues who run GNOME are either running Ubuntu's standard desktop (which features a custom version of the Dash to Dock extension) or customize it with the Dash to Panel extension, both of which (but specially the latter) completely ditch GNOME's "intended"... Source: over 1 year ago
It depends on what dock you are using and the shell theme. On Ubuntu vanilla they use gnome-shell-extension-ubuntu-dock which is a fork of dash-to-dock. Almost all the available docks for GNOME were forked from dash-to-dock, which looks like the one you're using. Source: over 2 years ago
You can get it from the git - https://micheleg.github.io/dash-to-dock/. Source: about 3 years ago
When you install the Dash to Dock extension (https://micheleg.github.io/dash-to-dock/) you can adjust it in the extensions settings. Source: about 3 years ago
Cairo-Dock - Cairo-Dock / GLX-Dock 3. 4 is now available. Cairo-Dock 3. 4 is finally released! One year after the 3.
RocketDock - RocketDock is a Mac OS X dock clone.
Latte Dock - Latte is a dock based on plasma frameworks that provides an elegant and intuitive experience for...
ObjectDock - ObjectDock is the most popular animated dock for Windows.
Winstep Nexus - The Winstep Nexus Dock is a FREE* professional dock for Windows. With Nexus, your most frequently used applications are only a mouse click away - and Nexus turns working with your computer into a fun and exciting experience.
KSmoothDock - KSmoothDock is a cool desktop panel with parabolic zooming effect for KDE Plasma 5, with the focus...