Try some of the well known DE's (KDE, Gnome, Cinnamon, Mate, Xfce) and see what you like. I personally enjoy KDE right now.
Arch Linux
The beloved lightweight distro
I've used KDE on my convertible during uni and it worked pretty good. I mean for a GUI oriented setup your options are pretty much KDE, gnome, cinnamon, xfce (don't know how good that is with touch though) or cosmic (is that out yet? Idk tbh).
Afaik gnome and kde both have good touchscreen support, maybe you'll need to do some slight modifications, so I'd say just try them out and see what you like.
Thanks, that's good to know.
What made you favour KDE over gnome?
Not really sure anymore tbh, I think kde had a decent tiling plugin and gnome not and kde felt like more control and options on contrary to gnomes streamlined Mac like interface. Nowadays I'm on i3/sway though, haven't really tried any DEs in a while
These days, I'm partial to EndeavourOS with KDE for those kinds of installs. It's still Arch underneath, and I don't mind a "lazy" install for a DE.
It also gives you several DEs to choose from during install, so you can take your pick.
I'm the same, I love using the cli for many things, but it's just no go on my Surface Go 2 if I want to use it as a tablet. I'm using KDE Plasma on Arch Linux, and it's pretty awesome in terms of touchscreen support. I also tried Gnome, but it has a nasty backspace issue in the on screen keyboard. When you use backspace it's like you press the left arrow key and then backspace, leaving half of the characters. Otherwise it's great.
It takes some time to get everything working right though. I didn't know how to get the on screen keyboard to work (Maliit), which is pretty important if you plan to use it on a tablet.
Another important thing is to use Wayland, as that greatly improves touchscreen support over Xorg.
So personally I'd suggest KDE, but Gnome is also really good if you don't mind the backspace issue. Or am I missing something that would fix that?
Back when I had a surface pro I used GNOME with a plugin that gave a floating dock that could be shown by pressing a semi-transparent button. That made it a lot easier to use without a keyboard. For applications I mostly used the default GNOME ones. They are often pretty easy to navigate with just a touchscreen.
Also, if you want to use the stylus to take notes or edit pdfs I recommend Xournal++. Krita is of course also great for drawing and has great stylus support.
I admit to being gnome-curious after their post about mosaic.
Xournal I remember from my uni days, although it appears to have come a long way!
With gnome are there integrations for managing pacman and the like? I seem to remember on Debian etc you get clicky ways to interact with apt (software "store", update notification bubbles etc)
With gnome are there integrations for managing pacman and the like?
GNOME Software integration with pacman was removed: https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/GNOME/Tips_and_tricks#GNOME_Software_integration_with_pacman
There are other pacman/AUR graphical frontends: https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/AUR_helpers#Graphical
I remember using pamac long time ago, it worked flawlessly. That's the package manager of Manjaro, but also works on Arch. It's written in GTK4, so nicely blends into Gnome UI
Oh shit that is a sweet arse wiki page.
Thank you kindly!
Plasma mobile is worth a try, been pretty happy with it on a detachable 2 in 1 without it's keyboard. The onscreen keyboard works better than Gnome or normal Plasma.
You are posting in an Arch linux group/"community", so just... you know... compile (whatever gui you want) and set it up properly.
And before you go "b-buh WHICH" -- Hyprland. Come on, you are an arch linux user. Time to wear your big boy pants.