
thomas.adam22:
Hello --
On 08/12/2007, Don Stewart
wrote: We've not much information on what's happening with tiling wms. One source of info is the debian package system's popularity contest: if a package is in debian, we get to see a snapshot of trends.
Be careful with that -- the popularity contest is slightly hit-and-miss and might not accurately reflect xmonad's use. What is it you're after though? A comparison of how many users are *potentially* (that's the operative word here) are using xmonad? How xmonad compares in development to other tiling WMs? Whether or not people use it if the moon is waxing as opposed to it being a Tuesday and the local store run out of meatloaf again?
Right. It's hard to read too much global information into the debian case, since it depends so much on package details on that system.
In my mind, tracking something's use is best determined through feedback and nothing else. I've watched xmonad grow for a long time,
Quite so. The mailing list and irc channel have continued to grow, for example, which might be better indicators.
and it's quite impressive; much quicker than a lot of other WMs that have sprung up. But it's rather late to the party in many respects; what sets it apart from other WMs is not only the language it's written in (something of a triumph I'm sure, but not something I care
Indeed, we want to ensure that's not an issue. The language should only matter in that we expect long term benefits in speed of development, and safety, that should be the main result for language choice.
about frankly), but also its operation of working; it's still fundamentally different from dwm for instance.
Oh, how so? I guess it has come a long way -- particular wrt. extensibility. -- Don