• @vis4valentine
    link
    213 years ago

    Oh yeah, most of the time are just webapps presented as a full app in a store. There are good apps out there, but most of what you find are a waste of time, space, and resources.

    • Evan
      link
      5
      edit-2
      3 years ago

      Thank you, added to the JS haters handbook

  • @k_o_t
    link
    143 years ago

    the most infuriating aspect of electron, is is that multi-billion (and even multi-trillion) dollar corporations think it’s ok practice to release desktop clients using electron, like wtf, each one of them can hire ten teams to build ten completely new desktop toolkits, let alone just design their applications to use native system tools 🤷‍♀️🤦‍♀️

    • @freely
      link
      63 years ago

      Both are full IDE’s though, to be fair. QtCreator even has a RAD for Qt which is really convenient.

      Why do you say Qt for Linux isn’t good? All the Qt programs (and KDE) I’ve used on Linux worked great.

        • @freely
          link
          23 years ago

          I use neither as well, although I did use QtCreator for a few weeks once, and its RAD (and vim mode) was nice for Qt dev.

          The main features are the same across all IDE’s - debugger, code completion, refactoring, linting, Git integration, and build systems support. I’m sure there’s more, but like I said I don’t use them so I can’t name more.

          Obviously VSCode can use plugins to do all this, same as many other editors. The line between IDE & text editor get blurry with plugins.

    • @AgreeableLandscapeOPM
      link
      53 years ago

      VSCode is more functional and uses less resources than a comparable open source C++ editor, for example QT Creator […]

      QT Creator is a full blown IDE. It would be more fair to compare it to Visual Studio, not Code.

  • @the_tech_beast
    link
    93 years ago

    I try to native apps as much as possible. If there isn’t one, I just use the web version of the app.

  • @KSPAtlas
    link
    53 years ago

    Like why does a communication app need to take up 1GB of my RAM??? Look at telegram desktop for example. It’s written in QT and it has a very low RAM usage.

  • @shiham@lemmy.shihaam.me
    link
    fedilink
    310 months ago

    Not just about RAM, it’s that most popular electron apps (like discord) ships really old versions of electron, and the some other electron app on your system may need another version of electron

    You end up CVEs and duplicates of electron