- Wayland (protocol) - Wikipedia
Wayland is a communication protocol that specifies the communication between a display server and its clients, as well as a C library implementation of that protocol [9] A display server using the Wayland protocol is called a Wayland compositor, because it additionally performs the task of a compositing window manager
- Wayland
Wayland is the language (protocol) that applications can use to talk to a display server in order to make themselves visible and get input from the user (a person) A Wayland server is called a "compositor" Applications are Wayland clients Wayland also refers to a system architecture
- What Is Wayland on Linux, and How Is It Different From X? - How-To Geek
Ever wondered what makes Wayland tick?
- Wayland, Massachusetts
Wayland is a quiet, peaceful community located in the MetroWest area of Massachusetts The Town takes great pride in its public school system, local history, and preservation of natural resources
- Wayland - ArchWiki
In contrast to Xorg, Wayland does not allow exclusive input device grabbing, also known as active or explicit grab (e g keyboard, mouse), instead, it depends on the Wayland compositor to pass keyboard shortcuts and confine the pointer device to the application window
- Wayland Protocol Documentation | Wayland Explorer
Wayland Explorer A better way to read Wayland documentation The most popular Wayland protocols all in one place and without having to sift through different repositories and XML files Start by reading the core Wayland protocol or discover some uncut gems
- What Is Wayland and What Does It Mean for Linux Users?
Wayland has been around for a while and is hailed as the much better alternative to X11 Learn what Wayland is, how it works
- Wayland - Debian Wiki
Wayland allows better isolation between processes: one window cannot access resources from, or inject keystrokes into, another window Wayland also has the potential to be faster, by reducing the amount of code between the processes and the hardware, by delegating lots of things to the processes themselves
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