glimmer-dsl-libui
xi-editor
glimmer-dsl-libui | xi-editor | |
---|---|---|
21 | 42 | |
440 | 19,808 | |
- | 0.0% | |
8.0 | 2.6 | |
25 days ago | about 2 months ago | |
Ruby | Rust | |
MIT License | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
glimmer-dsl-libui
-
Shoes makes building little graphical programs for Mac, Windows, Linux simple
glimmer-dsl-libui is a more actively maintained alternative
https://github.com/AndyObtiva/glimmer-dsl-libui
- The Quest for the Ultimate GUI Framework
-
Rubio-Radio Currently Playing Song & Full-Text Search
Another GitHub Pull Request for Rubio-Radio (open-source Internet radio app built with Ruby) got accepted and merged, which focused on displaying the currently playing song/program, loading all available radio stations (instead of a pre-defined limit), and enhanced full-text-search support including column-specific queries. The changes have been released in rubio-radio gem version 0.0.6. In fact, the enhanced full-text-search support is included in the latest version of Glimmer DSL for LibUI (Ruby Desktop Development GUI Library used to build Rubio-Radio) as part of the refined_table custom control for use in any projects, so software engineers get that feature for free now.
- _why's Estate
-
Rubio-Radio Bookmarking & Async Gradual Fetching
Recently, I blogged about how I contributed Pagination/Filtering support to Rubio-Radio, an Internet radio application built with Ruby and Glimmer DSL for LibUI.
-
New Glimmer DSL for LibUI Apps: RubyCrumbler and Rubio-Radio
I am particularly impressed by the fact that the developers of those apps fully went the distance by walking the walk, not just talking the talk, especially given that the developers of the first app (RubyCrumbler) were brand new to Glimmer DSL for LibUI and had to exercise great problem solving skills to finish their app on time for their needs.
-
Glimmer DSL for LibUI 0.5.10 - Shape Listeners
# From: https://github.com/AndyObtiva/glimmer-dsl-libui#shape-coloring require 'glimmer-dsl-libui' class ShapeColoring include Glimmer::LibUI::Application COLOR_SELECTION = Glimmer::LibUI.interpret_color(:red) before_body { @shapes = [] } body { window('Shape Coloring', 200, 200) { margined false grid { label("Click a shape to select and\nchange color via color button") { left 0 top 0 hexpand true halign :center vexpand false } color_button { |cb| left 0 top 1 hexpand true vexpand false on_changed do @selected_shape&.fill = cb.color end } area { left 0 top 2 hexpand true vexpand true rectangle(0, 0, 600, 400) { # background shape fill :white } @shapes << colorable(:rectangle, 20, 20, 40, 20) { |shape| fill :lime } @shapes << colorable(:square, 80, 20, 20) { |shape| fill :blue } @shapes << colorable(:circle, 75, 70, 20, 20) { |shape| fill :green } @shapes << colorable(:arc, 120, 70, 40, 0, 145) { |shape| fill :orange } @shapes << colorable(:polygon, 120, 10, 120, 50, 150, 10, 150, 50) { fill :cyan } @shapes << colorable(:polybezier, 20, 40, 30, 100, 50, 80, 80, 110, 40, 120, 20, 120, 30, 91) { fill :pink } } } } } def colorable(shape_symbol, *args, &content) send(shape_symbol, *args) do |shape| on_mouse_up do |area_mouse_event| old_stroke = Glimmer::LibUI.interpret_color(shape.stroke).slice(:r, :g, :b) @shapes.each {|sh| sh.stroke = nil} @selected_shape = nil unless old_stroke == COLOR_SELECTION shape.stroke = COLOR_SELECTION.merge(thickness: 2) @selected_shape = shape end end content.call(shape) end end end ShapeColoring.launch
-
Glimmer DSL for LibUI Code Area (Ruby Tooling Future)
# From: https://github.com/AndyObtiva/glimmer-dsl-libui#class-based-custom-controls require 'glimmer-dsl-libui' require 'facets' Address = Struct.new(:street, :p_o_box, :city, :state, :zip_code) class FormField include Glimmer::LibUI::CustomControl options :model, :attribute body { entry { |e| label attribute.to_s.underscore.split('_').map(&:capitalize).join(' ') text <=> [model, attribute] } } end class AddressForm include Glimmer::LibUI::CustomControl options :address body { form { form_field(model: address, attribute: :street) form_field(model: address, attribute: :p_o_box) form_field(model: address, attribute: :city) form_field(model: address, attribute: :state) form_field(model: address, attribute: :zip_code) } } end class LabelPair include Glimmer::LibUI::CustomControl options :model, :attribute, :value body { horizontal_box { label(attribute.to_s.underscore.split('_').map(&:capitalize).join(' ')) label(value.to_s) { text <= [model, attribute] } } } end class AddressView include Glimmer::LibUI::CustomControl options :address body { vertical_box { address.each_pair do |attribute, value| label_pair(model: address, attribute: attribute, value: value) end } } end class ClassBasedCustomControls include Glimmer::LibUI::Application # alias: Glimmer::LibUI::CustomWindow before_body do @address1 = Address.new('123 Main St', '23923', 'Denver', 'Colorado', '80014') @address2 = Address.new('2038 Park Ave', '83272', 'Boston', 'Massachusetts', '02101') end body { window('Class-Based Custom Keyword') { margined true horizontal_box { vertical_box { label('Address 1') { stretchy false } address_form(address: @address1) horizontal_separator { stretchy false } label('Address 1 (Saved)') { stretchy false } address_view(address: @address1) } vertical_separator { stretchy false } vertical_box { label('Address 2') { stretchy false } address_form(address: @address2) horizontal_separator { stretchy false } label('Address 2 (Saved)') { stretchy false } address_view(address: @address2) } } } } end ClassBasedCustomControls.launch
-
2021 Was The Year of The Ruby Desktop!!!
Glimmer DSL for LibUI (Prerequisite-Free Ruby Desktop Development GUI Library): this gem just won a 2022 Fukuoka Ruby Special Award after getting judged directly by Matz (creator of Ruby) and the Fukuoka Ruby Award Competition Judges! How is that for a Year of The Ruby Desktop accomplishment!!?!
-
Perfect Shape - Pure Ruby Geometric Algrithms
Another reason why this library was created was to address the need for supporting automated declarative drag and drop features in Glimmer DSL for LibUI coming soon (right now, it supports manually implementing drag and drop with area listeners out of the box).
xi-editor
-
Zed is now open source
Was confused until I realised I'd confused Zed, with Xi[1] which is also rust based, and which incidentally has a frontend called "Xim"..
Also there's a wiki-editor (like Tomboy[2]) called "Zim"[3].
[1] https://github.com/xi-editor/xi-editor
-
Text Editor: Data Structures
Project site linked from the GitHub[0] is https://xi-editor.io. Linked doc is a mirror of this[1], which was afaik originally written by Raph Linus.
[0]: https://github.com/xi-editor/xi-editor
[1]: https://xi-editor.io/docs/rope_science_01.html
-
The Absolute Minimum Every Software Developer Must Know About Unicode in 2023
> thing that gets deleted when you hit backspace
Is there a canonical source for this part, by the way? Xi copied the logic from Android[1] (as per the issue you linked downthread), and I vaguely remember that CLDR had something to say about this too, but I don’t know if there’s any sort of consensus here that’s actually written down anywhere.
[1] https://github.com/xi-editor/xi-editor/pull/837
- Google abandons work to move Assistant smart speakers to Fuchsia
-
What's is a rusty way to implement sharable trees?
This is pretty much how copy-on-write ropes work. Check out xi-rope, Ropey or crop, they're all built using B-trees and implement the behavior you described.
-
Helix (a Kakoune / Neovim inspired editor) 23.03
Helix is awesome, though once Lapce (spiritual successor to Xi editor) gets the Helix/Kakoune editing model, I may have to jump ship
-
Editors written in rust
Home (xi-editor.io)
-
How to share resources between instances of program?
Maybe take a look at the Xi editor (https://xi-editor.io/) (written in rust I think) that uses a client server architecture.
-
Suitable Rust GUI Library for Code Editor?
Have a look at what Lapce uses. The editor is coming along nicely, and iirc, they use the Xi editor as a plug-in.
-
CRDTs make multiplayer text editing part of Zed's DNA
Raph Levien posted a retrospective about using CRDT’s for collaborative editing in xi-editor here [1]. His conclusion is
“I come to the conclusion that the CRDT is not pulling its (considerable) weight. When I think about a future evolution of xi-editor, I see a much brighter future with a simpler, largely synchronous model, that still of course has enough revision tracking to get good results with asynchronous peers like the language server.”
[1]https://github.com/xi-editor/xi-editor/issues/1187#issuecomm...
What are some alternatives?
Glimmer - DSL Framework consisting of a DSL Engine and a Data-Binding Library used in Glimmer DSL for SWT (JRuby Desktop Development GUI Framework), Glimmer DSL for Opal (Pure Ruby Web GUI), Glimmer DSL for LibUI (Prerequisite-Free Ruby Desktop Development GUI Library), Glimmer DSL for Tk (Ruby Tk Desktop Development GUI Library), Glimmer DSL for GTK (Ruby-GNOME Desktop Development GUI Library), Glimmer DSL for XML (& HTML), and Glimmer DSL for CSS
helix - A post-modern modal text editor.
RubyGnome2 - A set of bindings for the GNOME libraries to use from Ruby.
alacritty - A cross-platform, OpenGL terminal emulator.
glimmer-dsl-gtk - Glimmer DSL for GTK - Ruby-GNOME Desktop Development GUI Library
iota - A terminal-based text editor written in Rust
Shoes - Shoes 4 : the next version of Shoes
lapce - Lightning-fast and Powerful Code Editor written in Rust
glimmer-dsl-swing - Glimmer DSL for Swing (JRuby Swing Desktop Development GUI Library) - Enables development of desktop applications using Java Swing and Java 2D, including vector graphics and AWT geometry.
Servo - Servo, the embeddable, independent, memory-safe, modular, parallel web rendering engine
qtbindings - An easy to install gem version of the Ruby bindings to Qt
kakoune.el - A very simple simulation of the kakoune editor inside of emacs.