ui
matrix-rust-sdk
ui | matrix-rust-sdk | |
---|---|---|
13 | 13 | |
208 | 1,078 | |
0.0% | 3.9% | |
10.0 | 9.9 | |
over 8 years ago | 1 day ago | |
Dart | Rust | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | 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.
ui
-
Crux: Cross-platform app development in Rust
As a counterpoint, the most thoughtfully designed and responsive task management app I've ever used is a Flutter app (http://quire.io) Maybe check it out and see if it changes your mind about what's possible with Flutter.
-
Solo project management app?
Give a tri on Quire
- Visual note taker
-
Question about timelines/gantt charts
If you are still looking for one, I would recommend using project management software so that you can have more comprehensive features and maximize your work. Some of the great ones that I've tried are Trello and Quire.
-
[Tool] 2 Time Management Tips for Productivity
Great post! I was not really good with my time management skill. But I learned that planning is a good start to improving it. I write down my to-do list the night before, and I can start focusing on doing my list that day. I also like to use time tracking to help me know where my time goes. The Pomodoro technique is my go-to method. The task management software that I used has a time tracking feature which is very helpful in improving my productivity. Todoist and Quire are good ones!
-
Time Management Tips - HELP!
I understand the struggle! What you can do is plan for your next day and plan what not to do. It's important to know what you don't need to do to focus on what needs to be done. I like to use project management software to manage my day-to-day tasks. You can also use the time-blocking technique to run your day. Both of these tools are great: Trello or Quire.
-
Tip for time management/being on time
Yes, I agree. Managing time is not easy and needs practice. I always plan out my day-to-day tasks using project management software. So, when I finish one job, I can complete it and start on the next one. I prefer the one that has time tracking, like Todoist or Quire.
-
Simple time tracking app
I used task management software with time tracking. What I usually do is create a task and then track the time I spend working on that task. You can check these tools: Todoist or Quire.
-
People of Reddit, how's your New Year resolutions going so far?
So far, so good! My resolution this year is to be more organized. Every day I wrote down my to-do list and scheduled them in task management software. I use the time-blocking technique and the calendar view. So far, I like using Todoist and Quire.
-
What are your new year resolutions for this year?
I use task management software to manage both my work and personal life, and I like Trello and Quire.
matrix-rust-sdk
-
Flutter seems to be having bad times internally
Yep, a good example is the element X rewrite
They use Jetpack on Android
https://github.com/vector-im/element-x-android
And SwiftUI on iOS
https://github.com/vector-im/element-x-ios
But both use the same underlying Matrix Rust SDK
https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-rust-sdk
So they share the core part of the app between platforms, but everything user facing is native
- Crux: Cross-platform app development in Rust
-
I made a crate: eyeball – Add observability to your Rust types!
The one place eyebal is already being used is matrix-rust-sdk, mostly for bits of the API that act as a model for specific UI parts in apps built on top of it. A part of those APIs is also using observable vectors from eyeball-im, which I didn't mention initially because it's not as well-documented and polished.
-
Collaborative WYSIWYG document editor built-on matrix-rust-sdk and matrix-rich-text-editor?
Hello everyone, I am finally making it to all of the great talks about Matrix from FOSDEM 23, and one thing that seemed like an obvious thing that could be built on some of the new projects works (matrix-rich-text-editor, matrix-rust-sdk) is a collaborative (multi-user, live edits) document tool built ontop of rust. That said, I haven't seen any project doing this yet. Does anyone know of one?
-
Matrix 2.0 — Matthew Hodgson talks about Rust in Element client, Rust SDK, IETF MLS, MIMI and more
Another important piece of the ecosystem for which Rust was used is the SDK. This new SDK was used to write the newest mobile client - Element X. The current Element client will also see its cryptography implementation being changed from Javascript to Rust, this was also made possible by the new Rust based SDK.
-
Some key-value storage engines in Rust
Let's say I'll switch as soon as they start using Sanakirja. They're partially right in their analysis of Sanakirja, but their comments are more about the lack of expressiveness of the unsafe keyword in Rust than about Sanakirja itself. I'm preparing a blog post about my dream version of unsafe.
-
IRCv3 2022 Spec round-up
>Well I care, that does not mean that you have to care.
The point I'm making is that the protocol being implement-able by yourself or grabbing a lib from someone else is moot, since you will 9 times out of 10 use a library.
>Again, look at the lack of client diversity for Matrix and tell me that you do not think that there is at least some correlation in terms of the complexity of the protocol.
The problem is not client diversity for Matrix - there's plenty of them. The problem is that Matrix is more than displaying a log on a screen, and most of the clients are frankly abysmal and could use a trained UI/UX owner.
>last I checked it meant using either Python or Go
The Rust SDK has worked well for me, although I can't state how close it is to Python or Go's libs. That said, I know I'm certainly not the only one using it.
The Rust lib could be wrapped into other languages (e.g, Ruby) if there's not a good SDK for that language. I don't really consider this to be an issue, especially considering the Rust SDK is maintained by the Matrix org themselves.
https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-rust-sdk
>Add to this that the more mandatory features you have and keep adding
Don't maintain your own bespoke library and you won't have to. :)
>But I am not going to behave as if images, reactions, code blocks, threads, end-to-end encryption, voice calls, video calls, etc. do not come at a cost.
They do come at a cost, but that's the price of admission for what people expect from modern chat systems. I'd rather live in 2022 than 2004, and I grew up on IRC.
-
Back to School: Free Rust Courses
I'm not entirely sure what I plan to use Rust with at the moment, however my first project so far has been to write a Matrix bot using the matrix-rust-sdk library :)
-
GTK4 Matrix Client
Just for everyone else reading, the modern Matrix Rust stack referred to here is the matrix-rust-sdk: https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-rust-sdk
-
E2EE vulnerability in multiple Matrix clients
The current way we're approaching this is to split the reference E2EE implementation into its own rust crate (https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-rust-sdk/tree/master/ma...) which can be used with any SDK (e.g. we're almost finished embedding it into the Kotlin matrix-android-sdk2 client)
Separately, there's also the overall matrix-rust-sdk https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-rust-sdk for clients to use as a "full fat" Matrix client SDK - as used by Fractal Next (https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/fractal/-/tree/fractal-next) etc. We might end up using this in Element too in future (especially in Element iOS, where a Swift UI + matrix-rust-sdk backend could be quite a cute next generation architecture).
So while the first generation reference Matrix SDKs (matrix-js-sdk, matrix-ios-sdk and matrix-android-sdk) were completely independent implementations, each with their own bugs and increased audit surface, we're hoping that matrix-rust-sdk will simplify this a lot in future.
What are some alternatives?
NFHTTP - A cross platform C++ HTTP library that interfaces natively to other platforms.
conduit
matrix-rich-text-editor - Matrix Rich Text Editor
threema-android - Threema App for Android.
crux - Cross-platform app development in Rust
element-android - A glossy Matrix collaboration client for Android.
Avalonia - Develop Desktop, Embedded, Mobile and WebAssembly apps with C# and XAML. The most popular .NET UI client technology
gomuks - A terminal based Matrix client written in Go.
Rocket - A web framework for Rust.
weechat-matrix-rs - Rust rewrite of the python weechat-matrix script.
Ruma - A set of Rust crates for interacting with the Matrix chat network.
matterbridge - bridge between mattermost, IRC, gitter, xmpp, slack, discord, telegram, rocketchat, twitch, ssh-chat, zulip, whatsapp, keybase, matrix, microsoft teams, nextcloud, mumble, vk and more with REST API (mattermost not required!)