macOS Spaces (virtual desktop) allows the user to have multiple desktops PER MONITOR. When a user switches a space, it’s not the entire set of monitors, just the one they are in.
Is there a way to do this in Plasma 6, or… even GNOME?
In the upcoming Cosmic desktop by Pop!_OS, workspaces can be monitor specific, just like MacOS
That’s good to know. I’m pretty excited for Cosmic. Pop is already pretty slick.
God I need to try it! It’s probably going to be insanely stable also.
I do this on Hyprland all the time, but it’s a tiling window manager. I’m not sure any desktop environments have support for it.
deleted by creator
No, it can’t be done that on kde or gnome. Here are two such questions on the “other” site, as some people have offered some workarounds there in the comments: https://www.reddit.com/r/kde/comments/bxrrn3/is_there_any_way_to_separate_kde/ and https://www.reddit.com/r/kde/comments/lijbee/multi_monitor_independent_desktop_workspace/
Gnome lets you do this on the primary display, but afaik it’s not possible on the secondary/tertiary displays.
This is unfortunately stupidly difficult on most Linux desktops, because the EWMH standard doesn’t support it. You mostly find support for it in niche desktops, like various tiling WMs or the Enlightenment DE.
(on the Linux side, I »think« only tiling window managers have really experimented with and taking advantage of this sort of thing)
You can have multiple workspaces per monitor on GNOME, just check your multitasking settings. I do this for my workflow since it’s more efficient for me.
Where does one find these multitasking settings?
I might be wrong since I haven’t checked for the location in gnome 40 but there should be tab in the main settings app for it; if not just search workspace in that app and it should come up.
deleted by creator
I don’t think you can do it with kwin (KDE wm), but if you’re using xorg, you can replace it with something like i3wm. Do note you’ll lose the desktop, and will need to unbind most KDE shortcuts. It’s definitely worth it though.
When browsing for workspace indicator extensions the other day, I alao saw this: Gnome extension Switch workspace on active monitor
It wasn’t useful to me, because I use only one huge monitor, but might be what you’re looking for. it was easy to go back and find it, because I remembered my search term was just “workspace”.