Looking forward to a Golang declarative framework.
My advice to the author: invest in rich multi-window support early on. It's easy not to, but you always need it in the end, and it's painful to retrofit.
I feel like there's a great cross-platform UI story to be told with Go, since cross compiling is so easy.
I once built a small utility using the "Fyne" framework; it was reasonably functional and made it very convenient to compile cross-platform executables (including for Android).
I took a look at your recommendation, "gova"; it seems to be just getting started—keep up the good work!
Apparently a major dependency is "Fyne", which does show some screenshots on their page:
https://fyne.io/
Looking forward to a Golang declarative framework.
My advice to the author: invest in rich multi-window support early on. It's easy not to, but you always need it in the end, and it's painful to retrofit.
I feel like there's a great cross-platform UI story to be told with Go, since cross compiling is so easy.
I think the right mental model is that Gova is to Fyne like DaisyUI is to TailwindCSS??
I took a look at your recommendation, "gova"; it seems to be just getting started—keep up the good work!
m.div([m.h1("title"), m.p(["click", m.a({href:"..."}, "me")])])
you can do (taken from the page)
g.VStack(g.Text(...), g.HStack(...).Spacing(g.SpaceMD))
some people will like this style, others not.