Windows Tiling Window Manager [TESTED]
For the software developer, the financial analyst with four Bloomberg terminals, the writer researching across 12 PDFs, the video editor with a timeline, bins, and preview window:
Workspacer sits between GlazeWM and komorebi. It is written in C# and offers a balance of power and usability. It has a plugin system, good multi-monitor handling, and a more approachable configuration file than komorebi.
Truly automatic, excellent multi-monitor support, powerful command palette, active development. Cons: Requires editing a config file (no GUI), lacks a system tray icon, basic by default. 3. komorebi (Most Powerful/Power User) Type: Advanced, programmable tiler. Cost: Free (Open Source). windows tiling window manager
Microsoft's own PowerToys includes . It is not a true tiling window manager, but it is the most accessible entry point. You define zones on your screen (e.g., a large zone on the left, two stacked zones on the right). Then, when you drag a window while holding Shift , it snaps perfectly into a zone.
komorebi is not for the faint of heart. It is a complete windowing system that uses (a hotkey daemon) for shortcuts. It supports floating windows, stacking layouts (like a deck of cards within a tile), bsp (binary space partitioning) layouts, and even custom layouts via JSON. It feels like a hybrid of bspwm and i3. For the software developer, the financial analyst with
Enter the . Once the exclusive domain of Linux users (i3, awesome, xmonad), the tiling philosophy has finally made its way to Windows. A Windows tiling window manager automatically resizes and arranges your open applications into a non-overlapping grid. You stop wrestling with your mouse to find the edge of a window, and you start using your keyboard to command a perfect, pixel-perfect layout.
Extremely lightweight (uses almost zero RAM), highly customizable (edit AHK scripts), supports dynamic tagging. Cons: Looks dated, AutoHotkey syntax is niche, limited non-English keyboard support. 5. Workspacer (The Balanced Choice) Type: Configurable tiler (C#). Cost: Free. Cost: Free. Fast
Fast, good documentation, plugin ecosystem. Cons: Development has slowed recently; requires .NET runtime. Part 4: A Deep Dive into a Typical Workflow (Using GlazeWM as an Example) Let’s walk through a typical morning using a tiling window manager on Windows.