Wow. I actually prefer cycling between the applications that I work with, and I was going to create an alt+tab patch to give it the traditional alt+tab behavior. Now I don’t have to. Thanks!
I think I’m going to keep all the clients that I work with in one tab. Spotify, background processes etc. can stay in one of the other tabs. What is a minor annoyance for me is how the “m”-mode in dwm is implemented. The clients that aren’t in focus are visible underneath the focused window. At least I think that’s how it’s done, since I can see Chromium at the bottom of urxvtc. alt+j, alt+k, alt+l, and alt+; is a bit more comfortable for me if I need to change between tags often since they’re in the home row, but they destroy the nice dwm keyboard shortcuts. Now that I use the fullscreen-mode that you suggested, I don’t switch that often, so it might make sense to use the F-keys. One thing that might be a bit off-topic, but I have been thinking about the placement of the left alt-key lately. I have caps lock mapped as control, and I only use the caps key and the left alt for controlling stuff – i.e. I don’t care about the Windows- or the Fn-key, or anything to the left of the left alt. I have observed that both of my thumbs rest on the space key, but I only hit space with the right thumb. What would make the keyboard more ergonomic for my use was if half of the space key was an alt key. What a waste of space (pun) the way that it is now. I have to move my thumb 2–3 cm into an awkward position every time that I want to press alt – which is something that I do very often. Imagine doing alt+j and alt+k without moving the thumb… -- Best regards, Alexander Teinum