I admire Mitchell’s ambition and dedication. A toy project turned into a sturdy foss app with a decently sized community in the blink of an eye, and he shows no signs of slowing down. I’d never...
I admire Mitchell’s ambition and dedication. A toy project turned into a sturdy foss app with a decently sized community in the blink of an eye, and he shows no signs of slowing down. I’d never heard of him before his appearance on Zig Showtime, and I wonder if the ghostty community is mostly comprised of zig fans or hashicorp fans (if hashicorp even has fans).
This “real world” use case for zig is inspiring, though I never seem to have the time or energy to put into learning low level programming. Oh well! Maybe one day vscode’s terminal will be replaced with ghostty and slightly better in some imperceptible way.
I like ghostty and do welcome this, but the reasoning with all the examples given does remind me of this XKCD and made me chuckle for a second.
I refuse to click the link but I am pretty confident that it is the Standards one.
As is tradition.
As a KDE user, I would love a QT wrapper for Libghostty one day
I admire Mitchell’s ambition and dedication. A toy project turned into a sturdy foss app with a decently sized community in the blink of an eye, and he shows no signs of slowing down. I’d never heard of him before his appearance on Zig Showtime, and I wonder if the ghostty community is mostly comprised of zig fans or hashicorp fans (if hashicorp even has fans).
This “real world” use case for zig is inspiring, though I never seem to have the time or energy to put into learning low level programming. Oh well! Maybe one day vscode’s terminal will be replaced with ghostty and slightly better in some imperceptible way.