If you want to code everything in low level languages feel free. I guess assemblers still work well or you can just list machine code.
For those who want a fast to learn and use higher level language for this Go is a great tool and there are great projects out there. Two of them in the top 10 for all cross platform beating out a lot of other languages (no presence of GTK or Qt up that high... https://ossinsight.io/collections/cross-platform-gui-tool/)
Why would I want something "fast to learn"? That sounds like one of the most ridiculous arguments when choosing a tool to master ever. On the level of "I chose this university because it was walking distance from home".
I'm choosing a tool I'm going to be using for the next 40 to 50 years. Whether it takes a month or a year to learn makes no difference whatever.
I want a tool language which is widely portable, so that I could run my programs without rewriting them on as many machines I own as possible.
I also want them to run as fast, as possible, because I want to run many useful programs on moderate hardware.
I want to be able to use as many libraries and external utilities as possible, because nobody knows when I might need them.
It should also work without internet, because who knows when exactly the government is going to cut the wire.
These core features are what I b would not even consider a language at all. The rest is bells and whistles. Nice to have, but completely optional.
>Two of them in the top 10 for all cross platform
I've never heard about any libraries from that list. In any case they seem like tools to write webpages, not tools to write desktop software.
I guess that's an interesting opinion to have. Is this based on having built your own desktop environment or some other project that led you to this conclusion?
For me I prefer higher level code and tooling wherever possible. Building this has been blazingly fast compared to previous window managers I have worked on.
I prefer higher level code and tooling wherever possible
exactly this.
go actually strikes a balance of being one of the few high level languages that can compile directly to binary. there are not many languages that can do that. common lisp, erlang, o'caml and maybe red are a few others that i am aware of. there are probably a few more that are less popular that i don't know.
for me high level implies at least automatic memory management and high level data types.
I mean much of gnome shell is written in JavaScript. But of course GTK is C.
Does Fyne have bindings to other languages? A search for fyne python gave some hilarious AI slop from Gemini suggesting pip install fyne, but the fyne python package is something completely different and unrelated. The nice thing about GTK is it can be used from virtually any language (QT a bit less so but still a lot)
No. Fyne does not have any bindings and never will in the official project.
The API is designed to work perfectly with the Go idioms and using it from any other language will be no where near as intuitive. Not to mention it would slow down the developers of the toolkit as well!
For those who want a fast to learn and use higher level language for this Go is a great tool and there are great projects out there. Two of them in the top 10 for all cross platform beating out a lot of other languages (no presence of GTK or Qt up that high... https://ossinsight.io/collections/cross-platform-gui-tool/)