zee
kilo
zee | kilo | |
---|---|---|
8 | 18 | |
1,405 | 7,125 | |
0.0% | - | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
over 1 year ago | 4 months ago | |
Rust | C | |
Apache License 2.0 | BSD 2-clause "Simplified" License |
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zee
- Micro β A Modern Alternative to Nano
- what terminal editor was intended to replace emacs in macOS with emacs bindings?
- What would you rewrite in Rust?
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Text editor and cursor navigation
I use a related scheme in https://github.com/zee-editor/zee
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Zas editor post-mortem
Indeed, writing a good editor is a mammoth task, I have been toiling on a Emacs-y editor in rust (https://github.com/zee-editor/zee) on/off for 3 years now..
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GitHub - mcobzarenco/zi: An incremental, declarative library for building terminal user interfaces in Rust.
Indeed, screenshots are a must! This library grew out of the zee text editor text editor - which does have screenshots, ha. I haven't prioritised promoting it and making a nice README, I see it's been posted on reddit, so I can't avoid it anymore π
- Zee - A modern text editor for the terminal written in Rust
- Zee β A modern text editor for the terminal written in Rust
kilo
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A nano like text editor built with pure C
Most of that is probably attributable to being based on Kilo: https://github.com/antirez/kilo (kinda strange they didn't link directly in their readme) - a tiny text editor written by antirez who notably also created Redis. Antirez has a bunch of really interesting side projects if you dig into their github repo.
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Micro β A Modern Alternative to Nano
Yeah, "micro" for an editor would be 11 kilo bytes. I bet it's possible to do a half-decent editor in C in 11KB. Antirez's "kilo" (~1000 lines of C) is 36KB when compiled with standard gcc (https://github.com/antirez/kilo).
That said, for many server-type use cases these days, 11MB isn't a huge deal. Still, I wonder if micro could be compiled on / ported to TinyGo and end up a few hundred KB? It looks like TinyGo can produce some pretty small binaries: https://tinygo.org/docs/guides/optimizing-binaries/
- Ask HN: Does this exist? Courses explaining well written codebases?
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What happens when you press a key in your terminal?
Anyone interested in the machinations of all of this terminal stuff should look at antirezβ kilo, a terminal text editor in under 1000 lines of code: https://github.com/antirez/kilo
There is a nice tutorial that walks through how one might write it from scratch: https://viewsourcecode.org/snaptoken/kilo/
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Vim sucks
kilo 1k of C
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A simple terminal game
I always wondered how people get stuff animated on the terminal but I never had the time to look into it up until a few years ago when someone on the internet released an awesome guide on how to create a text editor in less than 1000 lines of C. What caught my attention about this was that it was based on Antirez' kilo - which is a terminal based editor.
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Ask HN: How to learn about text editor architectures and implementations?
You could start by looking at something super simple like Kilo:
https://github.com/antirez/kilo
Even I could understand this one pretty well and that's no small matter.
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Ginkgo: A WIP small text editor built entirely in Rust with cursor control and select Vim features
I just started learning Rust 2 weeks ago, and I wanted to apply my learning towards a project.Ginkgo is a small text editor built entirely in Rust. It takes inspiration from the famous tiny C-based text editor, Kilo. It also includes many Vim inspired keybindings and features such as normal/insert modes. For convenience, it also has added mouse cursor support!
- What would one need to know in order to develop an in-shell VIM like code editor?
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Any interesting project ideas in c language
Write your own editor. As an example: kilo
What are some alternatives?
helix - A post-modern modal text editor.
wasm3 - π A fast WebAssembly interpreter and the most universal WASM runtime
SpaceVim - A community-driven modular vim/neovim distribution - The ultimate vimrc
luastatic - Build a standalone executable from a Lua program.
tree-sitter-json - JSON grammar for tree-sitter
luar - Script Kakoune using Lua
kakoune - mawww's experiment for a better code editor
wac - WebAssembly interpreter in C
lapce - Lightning-fast and Powerful Code Editor written in Rust
visidata - A terminal spreadsheet multitool for discovering and arranging data
IcicleDevelop - A freezing cold development environment
sn - Simple Notes using fzf