7 comments

  • Multicomp 3 days ago ago

    I still tell myself if I going to vibecode a windows app, it will be native and suport 2000 and be a completely static linked executive. Petzold style programming may require memory unsafe legacy languages, but boy does the resulting small fast program with accelerafor keys and native themeable controls make me comfortable.

    Im still bummed the web won the UI wars.

    • ruevs 3 days ago ago

      Someone at Microsoft thinks the same ;-)

      https://github.com/microsoft/edit

      If you have Windows 11 it comes with this new (open source) `edit` written in Rust - open a command prompt and type `edit`.

      This is somewhat amusing, considering all the bloat that it comes with otherwise. Even `notepad` has become rather... feature full... it has tabs, spell checking and AI...

  • userbinator 3 days ago ago

    I wonder how much more effort it would take to get working on Win9x (the first of the Win32 API).

    • ruevs 3 days ago ago

      I wondered the same and actually tried it on Windows 95 - it will be a bit more work. The bottom screen shots in this comment https://github.com/solvespace/solvespace/issues/1036#issueco... are the missing APIs on Win95...

      I expect the build for Windows 2000 may work on NT 4.0, because it has OpenGL, but Windows 3.11 with Win32s will never work - because it does not have OpenGL(I think...).

      And Unicode will also be a problem https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unicode_in_Microsoft_Windows

    • ghssds 3 days ago ago

      The first OS supporting Win32 API isn't Windows 95.

      Win32s for Windows 3.1x: 1993

      Windows NT 3.1: 1993

      Windows NT 3.5: 1994

      Windows NT 3.51: 1995 (may)

      Windows 95: 1995 (july)

  • bschwindHN 3 days ago ago

    The UI fits right in, in a good way!

  • 4 days ago ago
    [deleted]