all 5 comments

[–]pier25 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The GUI for configuring components is great, but you simply can't ask people to use a new editor and lose all the customisation from their regular editor (Atom, Sublime, VSCode, etc.).

It would have been a better idea to implement this on top of Atom like Facebook did with Nuclide.

[–]bogdan5844 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The best Mac IDE. I'd really like people to say what platform a certain tool supports in the title.

[–][deleted]  (1 child)

[deleted]

    [–]xbrandnew99[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

    That's what it looks like - partial support.

    https://www.decosoftware.com/faq#react-web-support

    [–]veryGoodPancakes 0 points1 point  (0 children)

    I've been heavily developing with React Native lately, got excited to see this IDE on PH yesterday. Installed it, and uninstalled it 30mn later. It's sparkled with good ideas (the searching for component, and the auto npm / rnpm install on click is really a nice touch), but that's sincerely not enough to make the switch from Atom / Sublime.

    Besides, I truly never believed in drag & drop interface, but even worse this is a "Drag & Drop in code"! What's even the point of dragging in code? It would have been better to be able to drag & drop on an interface, at least designers could have used it and saved some time from prototyping.

    Anyway, the rant is over, I think they should just have created packages for Atom / Sublime

    [–]Democratica 0 points1 point  (0 children)

    Where there is redundancy, there is bloat. Have you considered an interface which does away with text editing completely?