💾 Archived View for not-a-web-developer.srht.site › 2022 › January › lite-xl.gmi captured on 2023-07-10 at 13:25:34. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content

View Raw

More Information

⬅️ Previous capture (2022-06-11)

-=-=-=-=-=-=-

lite-xl is goat

a little context is needed to explain where i come from.

so i've been using vscode for a long time now, and it's been really nice to use; it supports everything i use and it has a lot of stuff that makes life easy (especially when your only experience with code editors before vscode is notepad).

however, it has one problem:

It's heavy asf

in hindsight, i shouldn't have expected anything different from something that's basically an all-in-one IDE written to run in a web browser of all things, but i didn't know about electron or how it works, so i was shocked. shocked especially because i was running windows on a hard drive, and it took north of 30 seconds just to launch on top of taking all my memory (literally; i only had 4 gigs of memory back then)

Upgrading my computer didn't help as much as I wanted.

I tried doubling the memory from 4 to 8 gigs, and now i could run a browser window alongside my code editor, yay

as you'd expect, it wasn't much of an improvement. launch times were still horrible, and it still gobbled up all the memory it could get (not to mention how much it was hammering my decade-old dualcore CPU)

in desparation, i looked for replacements.

i tried the following editors:

after all this, i finally found lite-xl.

this is lite-xl.

I don't exactly remember how i found it (i think somebody wrote an article about it which got recommended to me by google discover), but i checked it out and realised that it's basically sublime text, but better in the following ways:

anyway, i like lite-xl and will shill it till the end of the universe. use it if you want, don't use it if you don't want to.

go back to home