
CodeRabbit
Graphite
Ellipsis
GitHub
Cubic
CodeAnt AI
SonarQube
GitHub Copilot
Glade
Anjuta
GNOME Builder
Dear ImGui
wxFormBuilder
Zenity
Yad
Code::Blocks
CodeRabbit
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CodeRabbit might be a bit more popular than Glade. We know about 25 links to it since March 2021 and only 19 links to Glade. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
I run Devin Review and CodeRabbit on every PR. PDF spec edge cases and CSS layout corner cases are exactly the kind of thing where having a second pair of eyes matters, and as a solo maintainer I don't have human reviewers. Both tools have caught real issues, especially around pagination edge cases. - Source: dev.to / 3 months ago
Navigate to coderabbit.ai and click the "Get Started Free" button. CodeRabbit supports sign-up through four Git platforms:. - Source: dev.to / 4 months ago
Install CodeRabbit from coderabbit.ai and connect your repositories. - Source: dev.to / 4 months ago
Open coderabbit.ai in your browser and click the "Get Started Free" button. - Source: dev.to / 4 months ago
Alternatively, you can start at coderabbit.ai, click "Get Started Free," and select Azure DevOps as your platform. This path takes you through CodeRabbit's onboarding flow which guides you through the Marketplace installation and PAT setup together. - Source: dev.to / 4 months ago
Basically title, I see that https://glade.gnome.org/ from apt info glade points to an empty website. Source: about 3 years ago
The Glade website says that, as of August 2022, it's not being developed anymore and I remember reading an article somewhere (Phoronix?) saying that the GTK devs consider it deprecated and want you hand-writing GTKBuilder XML instead. I remember hearing several months ago that the GTK devs were deprecating Glade in favour of expecting people to hand-write GTKBuilder XML. Source: over 3 years ago
So, what's the best way to tackle the challenge: writing GNOME extensions + bind them to GNOME app, or GJS, or Glade, or something else? I thought about working directly with the specific tool's source code but then I realise it'll be just a waste of my time decoding the code written by somebody else for the sake of adding a few hundred lines of code that would still make just a miserable part of the original... Source: over 3 years ago
Can't argue with that, but to me it seems that things have substantially deteriorated since desktop GUIs fell out of fashion. Maybe that tells you more about my age than about the state of the art, but in the 90's one could "learn" GUI programming in about 30min in a RAD tool by throwing controls in containers and implementing callback functions in "direct style" for the event (Qt , swing, Java/ScalaFX, Gtk,... Source: over 3 years ago
I'm also learning Pyhton with GTK. I don't know if you already use GTK4 or if you decided to stick with GTK3 to be able to generate the xml file with Glade (drag and drop) because GTK4 isn't supported by Glade. That being said for GTK4 and python I found a very nice guide right here. Source: about 4 years ago
Graphite - Graphite is a highly scalable real-time graphing system.
Anjuta - Anjuta is a versatile Integrated Development Environment (IDE) for C and C++ on GNU/Linux.
Ellipsis - Ellipsis is an AI developer tool that can review code, fix bugs, and more.
GNOME Builder - Builder is an IDE for GNOME that is focused on bringing the power of the platform to more...
GitHub - Originally founded as a project to simplify sharing code, GitHub has grown into an application used by over a million people to store over two million code repositories, making GitHub the largest code host in the world.
Dear ImGui - Dear ImGui: Bloat-free Graphical User interface for C++ with minimal dependencies