I am looking for a distro with a customisable UI. I want the ability to change everything in the UI: like changing the window borders style, animated interface, creating transition animations. Something that can allow me to create UI from my favourite video games. I am even willing to learn a language if needed. Just don’t suggest arch because I’m only interested in visuals. I don’t want to spend time creating and troubleshooting other aspects of os. Also, if above requirements can be achieved with changing the desktop environment, please suggest that too. I am somewhat familiar with Linux as I used it a few years ago for some time. Back then, the games’ support was lacking, so I switched back. But now with steam os and proton’s contribution, games shouldn’t be a hassle to run.

  • tomatoely@sh.itjust.works
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    2 days ago

    If you want to get into customizing UIs hard, something the likes of this

    You could get started with window managers (very opiniated topic, its really up to you to decide on which you should use) and UI toolkits like

    Also I know X11 is slowly dying but AwesomeWM fits your bill really nicely.

    TL,DR: You want a cool UI? look at unixporn’s top posts of all time, research an option you find good enough and go bananas on everything you need to make yourself at home.

    ALSO consider posting at !unixporn@lemmy.ml so we can marvel at your fine grained rice, good luck!

  • phantomwise@lemmy.ml
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    3 days ago

    You can get a customizable UI on any distro, it will depend on which desktop environment or compositor you choose. Though if you use a slow moving distro like debian it might be a while until you get newer stuff unless you are on the testing branch.

    A desktop environment will include everything you need (bar, power menu, notifications, etc) and be configured to work. If you choose KDE, you will be able to customize a lot. Or there’s also Cosmic that’s still in alpha but will be out soon I hope, it allows for both floating windows and tiling windows, so you can try both and see which you prefer.

    If you choose a compositor instead of a DE, it will draw your windows but will not do anything else, you will have to install and configure a bar, a notification daemon, etc, or you won’t have any. In that case you have several options :

    • Wayfire : Floating windows compositor (like on Windows, or KDE and Gnome)
    • Hyprland : Dynamic tiling compositor (the windows are automatically arranged in a grid)
    • Sway : Manual tiling compositor (you decide where the windows go manually in a grid)
    • Niri : Infinite scrolling compositor The difference is in how the windows are arranged. You can look at demos to see what they would look like. No option is inherently better, it’s a matter of personal preference. Personally I absolutely hate dynamic tiling, but I know a lot of people prefer it over manual tiling.
    • dovahking@lemmy.worldOP
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      2 days ago

      Didn’t know about compositors. It looks more promising than using DE. That you for all the links you provided.

  • the_abecedarian@piefed.social
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    3 days ago

    Don’t pick a whole distro based on the UI. The distro choice is about stability vs bleeding edge packages, package manager, minimal/maximal installs, security hardening vs convenience, use or avoidance of particular systems (e.g. systemd), and things like that.

    The UI will come from your choice of desktop environment, window manager, compositor, etc. Those can be installed on most distros. You can also look at dotfiles for more theming. Ofc it’s silly to install a different UI on a particular flavor/version/spin of a distro built for a given desktop environment (like Kubuntu), though it’s still possible.

    I’m enjoying Niri rn. It’s a scrolling & tiling window manager. I have it running on opensuse.

    • dovahking@lemmy.worldOP
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      3 days ago

      Thanks for the insight. I don’t know what dotfile is, so I’ll definitely check it out. I’m starting to realise I’m probably expecting more than what might be possible for now.

      • the_abecedarian@piefed.social
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        3 days ago

        Linux is super configurable! You’ll just need to try out a bunch of different window managers, taskbars, etc to see which one you like best, but maybe look for some videos to preview a couple first.

        The unixporn Lemmy community also has examples

      • MyNameIsRichard@lemmy.ml
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        3 days ago

        Dotfiles are files whose name starts with a dot. Configuration files are called dotfiles because they used to start like that and litter your home directory. These days configuration files tend to live under the .config folder. The name has stuck though.

  • Fecundpossum@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    I highly recommend Hyprland if you want a truly infinitely customizable UI. But, there’s a big learning curve to even using it, let alone installing it and setting it up.

    You could use endeavourOS as your operating system, which is Arch based yet easy to install. I can’t speak to setting up Hyprland on other distros as I haven’t done it, but I’m sure if you look around you’ll find out what you need to know.

    • dovahking@lemmy.worldOP
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      3 days ago

      Thanks. I’ll look into hyprland. Is endeavour stable enough to use, as I only have a laptop as my main machine. So I want something that don’t need fixing every now and then.

      • Fecundpossum@lemmy.world
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        3 days ago

        Install your software from official repositories and flatpak and you shouldnt have any issues. My latest install has been going strong for about 6 months without issue. Linux in general is quite stable unless you’re mucking about with things you don’t understand, and if you do like to live dangerously in that regard, it’s a great way to learn a lot.

        If you’re worried about stability, keep good backups. Back up your important personal files, as well as your config files so you can reapply any customizations you had in place.

        If anything happens that’s too tedious to troubleshoot, reinstall, it takes like 20 minutes tops and gets you back to square one.

        You could also use time shift to create system snapshots.

          • Hule@lemmy.world
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            2 days ago

            I also use EndeavourOS. Look into btrfs snapshots, it’s easy to set up and use. It rolls back your filesystem to an earlier state.

            It has saved me 3 times thus far.

  • Eugenia@lemmy.ml
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    3 days ago

    The truth is that none will allow you what you have in your mind exactly, unless you get down dirty and start programming it. However, some DEs are more customizable than others, e.g. KDE is more customizable than Gnome, for example.

    • dovahking@lemmy.worldOP
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      2 days ago

      That seem to be the case as I can’t find anything that allows me to change the window border shapes. I’ll have to look even deeper.

      • Eugenia@lemmy.ml
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        2 days ago

        I think XFce supports quite a few themes for the window manager that completely changes how the window borders look like.