I love those buildings and live in one, couldn't be happier. Super nice view of the city, and very affordable since where I live many of those buildings still belong to the state.
One advantage many overlook is the amount of natural light, what a.o.t. has important benefits to the mental and physical health of the population. According to Wilfried Stallknecht (an architekt behind many projects in the GDR), the buldings should keep a distance that guaranteed that every appartment had, on the 22. February of the year, at least a room with 2 hours of sunlight. If you walk in those planned areas you see the huge space surrounding the buildings, with lots of green areas, parks, playgrounds and so on.
Typically you shouldn't use repositories from other distros in debian, only use repositories meant for that purpose. Packages have specific requirements, and their versions will probably differ between distros.
aptsearches for packages listed in repositories defined in/etc/apt/sources.list, like you said, but nowadays mostly in.sourcesfile inside/etc/apt/sources.list.d. In a regular install you should find there adebian.sourcesfile with the main debian packages, which include all DEs you mentioned. For example, try:apt update && apt search cinnamon. You can browse the packages here: http://deb.debian.org/debian/pool/. Repositories usually include sets of packages, not a single package/software. So don't expect to find a repository for XFCE, another for GNOME etc. All these packages are available in the main Debian repo.You can add other
.sourcesfiles to activate other repos. That's actually whatextrepodid for you, you should find a new.sourcesfile related to librewolf.Regarding
xed, that's indeed not packaged in the Debian repos. You could try manually downloading the Linux Mintxed-packages (link), installing them withdpkgand see what happens, since that wouldn't replace core debian packages. Or simply build them manually, there are even instructions for building a.debpackage: https://github.com/linuxmint/xed#installation.You can try installing specific tools of some DE, but possibly that will download lots of libraries of that DE required by that specific tool (which shouldn't be a big deal anyway). You can list the dependencies of a package with
apt-cache depends ...to see what you need. There are also lots of software not designed for a specific DE and thus have less dependencies, maybe check what folks using minimalist window managers (like dwm, i3wm etc.) suggest.