• I’m still confused by this not being cross-platform. It’s made in Rust; basically every graphics library is cross platform out of the box, and so is all the file IO stuff. There will be some specialist OS api stuff in places but surely it can’t be much.

    For once this comment isn’t even snark. I acknowledge my ignorance and wonder if someone could explain why the cost is bigger than I think?

    Perhaps it’s setting up CI and packaging for other platforms? Maybe they want human QA on every release? Maybe the APIs for slick OS integration are more complicated than I realise? (e.g. putting UI in the taskbar)

  •  ruffsl   ( @ruffsl@programming.dev ) OP
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    24 months ago

    Only just got a 120Hz monitor recently, so reading scrolling text now is so much easer and faster than before. Looking forward to any IDE that can match that kind of framerate performance as well.

    Too bad I don’t own a mac to be able to test out the current release of Zed as an IDE. However, I’m not sure about the growing trend of rasterizing the entire GUI, as compared to conventional text rendering methods or GUI libs with established accessibility support.

      •  ruffsl   ( @ruffsl@programming.dev ) OP
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        14 months ago

        Do you use it combined with terminal emulators?
        Wouldn’t that result in vertical scroll snapping to textual lines, and horizontal scroll snapping to character widths?
        A personal preference I suppose for navigation, but a bit jumpy to read from while moving rapidly.

          •  ruffsl   ( @ruffsl@programming.dev ) OP
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            14 months ago

            I was more curious about horizontal/vertical scroll snapping of text, given if the underlying vim properties are still limited to terminal style rendering of whole fractions of text lines and fixed characters, then it’s less of a concern what exactly the GUI front end is.

            • It scrolls smoothly, it doesn’t snap line by line. Although once the scroll animation is complete the final positions of lines and columns do end up aligned to a grid.

              Neovim (as opposed to Vim) is not limited to terminal rendering. It’s designed to be a UI-agnostic backend. It happens that the default frontend runs in a terminal.

            • It explains most of this on the features page of the site.

              It’s pretty snappy even on lower spec machines. I didn’t notice any issues with scroll snapping.