StackWM vs AeroSpace
Choose StackWM if you want a more desk-like, zone-and-scene workflow. Choose AeroSpace if you want a keyboard-driven tiling manager and are comfortable living inside that model.
AeroSpace is for people who want an i3-like tiling workflow on macOS. StackWM is for people who want a calmer, more opinionated wide-screen desk model.
This page focuses on the differences most likely to affect a buying or switching decision, not every checkbox in either product.
StackWM fits best if
- You want stable regions and scene recall more than a strictly tiled desktop.
- You prefer semantic screen areas over a tree of tiled containers.
- You want context windows to stay available without demanding visible space all the time.
AeroSpace may be enough if
- AeroSpace is stronger if your goal is a keyboard-first tiling environment.
- It is appealing if you want a modern tiling manager on macOS without turning the whole product into a window utility suite.
- Users who like managing a tiled workspace as a primary discipline may prefer it.
- It may appeal more to people optimizing around a tiling mental model rather than a saved-context model.
What actually changes in daily use
AeroSpace centers keyboard tiling. StackWM centers stable regions, stacks, and scene recall on top of wide-screen attention management.
Zones and stacks map more directly to a center-and-context work style on large displays.
Scenes make switching work modes more explicit and easier to reason about.
The model is more opinionated for focus-first workflows.
If you are switching from AeroSpace
- If you enjoy keyboard-driven tiling and workspace discipline, do not assume StackWM is an upgrade; it is a different answer.
- StackWM is worth trying when you want stable focus regions and recurring scenes more than a tiled tree.
- Expect the switch to feel less like learning another tiler and more like adopting a different workspace philosophy.
| Decision point | StackWM | AeroSpace |
|---|---|---|
| Keyboard-first tiling control | Partial. | Strong. |
| Named regions with multiple windows per region | Yes. | Not the first-class frame. |
| Scene-based recall of recurring contexts | Yes. | Not the main focus. |
| Best fit for users who want a digital desk model | Higher. | Lower. |
| Best fit for users who want the desktop to remain tiled | Lower. | Higher. |
FAQ
Is AeroSpace closer to yabai or to StackWM?
In spirit it is closer to keyboard-first tiling tools. StackWM is closer to a focus-first, zone-and-scene workflow.
Why compare StackWM with AeroSpace at all?
Because real users often move between tiling tools and more opinionated workflow tools while trying to find a stable system on macOS.
Who should choose StackWM here?
Users who want less tiling discipline and more stable attention-oriented regions, especially on wide displays.
Read next
Other comparisons
StackWM vs Rectangle
Choose StackWM if you want named zones, per-zone stacks, and repeatable scene restore on wide screens. Choose Rectangle if your workflow mostly stops at fast snapping and resize shortcuts. If you are considering Rectangle Pro, the gap is less about raw feature count and more about whether you want a dedicated workspace model.
StackWM vs Magnet
Choose StackWM if you need your display to behave like a reusable work surface with zones, stacks, and scenes. Choose Magnet if you want a straightforward snap tool and prefer manual arrangement over adopting a richer workspace model.
StackWM vs yabai
Choose StackWM if you want a lower-friction, desk-like workflow built around zones, stacks, and scenes. Choose yabai if you want a deeply configurable tiling window manager and accept a steeper setup and configuration curve.