| ▲ | sanskritical 4 hours ago | |||||||||||||
If you want an example of an actually lightweight modern desktop editor to take inspiration from, try zed.dev Zed is written in Rust, insanely fast, consumes virtually no resources, has an Emacs input mode (which I use exclusively) and despite not having the greatest support for Emacs LISP (only via limited third party extension, its singular flaw) has replaced emacs-ng as my daily driver. | ||||||||||||||
| ▲ | kurouna 3 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||||||||
Thank you for the comment and the suggestion! I have actually tried Zed, and I completely agree with you—it is an outstanding product. Its speed and incredibly low memory footprint are truly impressive. However, while it does feature an Emacs input mode, I found that the range of supported Emacs commands is still somewhat limited. Because of this restriction, I couldn't quite operate it with the same feel and depth as a dedicated Emacs environment. That being said, Zed is definitely a masterpiece of modern desktop editors, and its architecture is highly inspiring! | ||||||||||||||
| ▲ | gozzoo 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||||||||
I’ll never get why people hype up Zed. Sublime Text already has all the same perks—and beats Zed at the very things it claims to improve. Sure, it might not have every advanced feature, but for “vibe coders” who don’t need a full IDE and just want to skim or tweak generated code, Sublime Text is the better choice. | ||||||||||||||
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