I'm curious about what Hyprland actually does. Is it purely for customizing windows and tiles, or does it contribute to the overall ricing experience on Linux? Can I use Hyprland with Fedora's KDE environment? Also, how resource-intensive is it?
1 Answer
Hyprland is actually a standalone Wayland compositor and window manager, similar to KDE's KWin. So while you can run it on Fedora, when you log in, you'll be using Hyprland's own tiling desktop instead of KDE. It's a total switch, not just a customization.

Thanks for clarifying! So I can choose when to run Hyprland or KDE without deleting anything. For example, I can use Hyprland for music and YouTube, and switch back to KDE for work, right?