WebViewFeedback
prism.el
WebViewFeedback | prism.el | |
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35 | 18 | |
413 | 269 | |
1.7% | - | |
8.8 | 4.7 | |
8 days ago | 7 months ago | |
Emacs Lisp | ||
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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WebViewFeedback
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Show HN: Ambient, a multiplayer game engine and platform using WASM/WebGPU/Rust
You say that being web centric precludes usage on conventional gaming platforms. What about all the games that are PC only anyways? They could use Tauri or whatnot & have incredibly easy time porting to native.
Games such as Battlefield have already used web technology to power much of the game chrome. Taking this a step further doesn't seem like a real constraint. Microsoft themselves are working to extend fast performance webviews to Xbox uwp's. https://github.com/MicrosoftEdge/WebView2Feedback/issues/215...
You're also not acknowledging the upside. Plenty of games would love to have an easy-to-make runs-anywhere multi-parryty game. Letting people log in from work or their phone could be a huge advantage to reaching markets. The market of people with access to web browsers is much bigger than the market of console owners!
You're also constraining your thinking to a narrow band in other ways, again ignoring plenty of great potential. Unreal has had huge success gaining entry into all kinds of unexpected spaces; cinema, architecture, events. Engines have a much wider market than just games, and having engines available on a much broader set of modalities than conventional game engines can unlock new use cases. No one's going to build a navigation tool requiring everyone to have a Steam Deck, but if all it takes is a phone then maybe that becomes interesting.
This also seems like an amazing starter kit for education and hobby coders. Wouldn't it be amazing to be able to be a year or two into learning development, and be able to create your own virtual world? That anyone can easily join & access from any device? That potential makes me thrilled.
Maybe this innovation isn't for you & you want to stick to conventional modalities. Fine, great! Don't use this. I for one see a lot of potential & reason for excitement. I think it has plenty of revenue potential, and vast amounts of cool potential.
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Current state of MAUI?
Drag and drop is still broken in WebView2, so all blazor Maui drag and drop is broken. This is still not being fixed by MS https://github.com/MicrosoftEdge/WebView2Feedback/issues/2805
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Chrome extensions in .NET web view controls
Add Ons or Extensions with WebView2 (WebView2Feedback#98)
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Sojour 1.0.46.0 has been released!
FIXED! RPG-254 Unbeknownst to me, Microsoft broke the toolbar on the WebView2 component that Sojour uses for displaying PDFs. The toolbar is now visible again and I have also fixed an odd threading issue, where once upon a time, opening a character sheet used to make that character sheet's window unresponsive for the first click. It's now responsive from the get-go.
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Microsoft Teams is getting big performance improvements next month
Comment on the page point to a few GitHub issues for macOS and Linux support.
Linux: https://github.com/MicrosoftEdge/WebView2Feedback/issues/645...
> Hey all - We don't currently have a timeline for when we would begin this work. Unfortunately it's very unlikely to be soon.
macOS: https://github.com/MicrosoftEdge/WebView2Feedback/issues/131...
> No updates since @ningccn's comment above. We are continuing to make progress on Mac and haven't begun Linux planning yet.
"Microsoft Teams is getting big performance improvements".... but only for Windows!
Maybe some day we can have WebView2 in Linux[1] and others.
[1] https://github.com/MicrosoftEdge/WebView2Feedback/issues/645
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Issues with Microsoft Edge WebView2 after release 109.0.1518.52
Got some traction over on GitHub, please post your comments there! Microsoft has acknowledged this issue and is tracking: https://github.com/MicrosoftEdge/WebView2Feedback/issues/3136
- Microsoft Edge Webview2 Runtime failing on install
- Mircosoft Teams desktop client on Linux is being retired and will be replaced by a progressive web app (running on Chrome/Edge).
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MS Teams Linux client is being retired. To be replaced by a progressive web app
Yep, and edge webview2 uses edge for the most part. Yet there's something specific to the edge webview2 runtime that makes it hard to port even if edge itself is already available on mac/linux. I think it's because it uses some windows specific APIs to expose functionalities that aren't available to regular webviews.
They were planning on maybe releasing the linux port around the end of 2021, as they were prioritizing the mac port first.
But I don’t think even the mac port has been released yet... So it kind of makes sense for the Teams team (ha!) to just not bother with a linux release if the runtime they are developing on isn't even on the release roadmap yet. Though I guess that makes the switch from electron even more confusing.
https://github.com/MicrosoftEdge/WebView2Feedback/issues/645
prism.el
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Just showing off how nice lisp can look in prism-mode. Check reply for the config :)
Heh, seriously, though, it's not necessary to use a rainbow of colors. You can use any number of colors and rotate through them. For example, this uses just 3 colors, gradually desaturating them as the depth increases. Since each color is easily distinguished from the other 2, it makes code very readable: https://github.com/alphapapa/prism.el/raw/master/images/parens-0.5.png
- Release v0.3 · alphapapa/prism.el (Disperse Lisp forms and other languages into a spectrum of colors by depth -- like rainbow-delimiters, et al, but more powerful)
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How do I build a syntax highlighter based on S-Expressions?
If you can use tree-sitter, that's obviously a good choice. Alternatively, you can see how I implemented https://github.com/alphapapa/prism.el, which isn't regexp-based, using Emacs's built-in syntax parsing instead.
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Trying to find a package that colorizes file contents by indentation level.
I did some experimenting with supporting XML directly in https://github.com/alphapapa/prism.el/issues/16. It seems that it's not easily done with existing Emacs SGML-related functions, but I'm guessing that tree-sitter will help a lot in Emacs 29.
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How to combine highlight-parenthesis with rainbow-delimiters?
It's not exactly what you asked for, but you may also find this useful: https://github.com/alphapapa/prism.el It can highlight parens distinctly too.
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Change text appearance in buffer
As examples, I can recommend code in https://github.com/alphapapa/highlight-function-calls (simple) and https://github.com/alphapapa/prism.el (more complex).
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Colorize blocks of LISP
There is also the package prism.el.
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How to properly font-lock for a custom major-mode aka how to use complex regex?
The best advice I can offer is to carefully and repeatedly study the Elisp manual section on font-lock, and to model on the source code of a similar project. The most I've done with it is in https://github.com/alphapapa/prism.el
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How We Made Bracket Pair Colorization 10,000x Faster
There is one for emacs. Could be good inspo if someone wanted to make a VSCode version.
https://github.com/alphapapa/prism.el
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Screenshot Sunday: What does your Emacs look like today?
You might be interested in https://github.com/alphapapa/prism.el
What are some alternatives?
lutris - Lutris desktop client
Bracket-Pair-Colorizer-2 - Bracket Colorizer Extension for VSCode
nvim-ts-rainbow - Rainbow parentheses for neovim using tree-sitter. Use https://sr.ht/~p00f/nvim-ts-rainbow instead
icomplete-vertical - Global Emacs minor mode to display icomplete candidates vertically
vscode-extension-samples - Sample code illustrating the VS Code extension API.
vscode-python - Python extension for Visual Studio Code
awesome-electron-alternatives - A curated list of awesome Electron alternatives.
quelpa - Build and install your Emacs Lisp packages on-the-fly directly from source
design - WebAssembly Design Documents
emacs-config - My personal Emacs configuration