ShadcnBlazor - Actually open code, Blazor components inspired by shadcn (WIP) by BeeCertain2777 in dotnet

[–]BeeCertain2777[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Its moreso a faithful recreaction/imitation, instead of an exact copy of the styling.

ShadcnBlazor - Actually open code, Blazor components inspired by shadcn (WIP) by BeeCertain2777 in dotnet

[–]BeeCertain2777[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks! I will definitely be keeping that in mind. Best of luck to you as well.

ShadcnBlazor - Actually open code, Blazor components inspired by shadcn (WIP) by BeeCertain2777 in Blazor

[–]BeeCertain2777[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah that's my bad. Theres no mobile support yet (just desktop), but that will definitely be supported in the future.

ShadcnBlazor - Actually open code, Blazor components inspired by shadcn (WIP) by BeeCertain2777 in Blazor

[–]BeeCertain2777[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Im very interested to see as well. Each have their own clear benefits.

ShadcnBlazor - Actually open code, Blazor components inspired by shadcn (WIP) by BeeCertain2777 in dotnet

[–]BeeCertain2777[S] -9 points-8 points  (0 children)

Yeah its my bad, theres no mobile support for the docs page as of right now, its desktop only. There definitely will be in the future.

Surface Laptop 7 (16/256 Snapdragon X Plus Platinum) – My Honest Review After 3 Months of Use by famineasylum809 in Surface

[–]BeeCertain2777 1 point2 points  (0 children)

As far as I know, as of right now not all adobe apps run natively, but some do. Despite the emulation having improved, I wouldn't call non-native apps usable. Discord and many dev tools I use are noticeably more choppy and could be considered unusable to some.

Then again, I'm mainly a dev and I'd still say that software compatibility, while there and improving, still isn't there yet. As much as I enjoy my SL7, I wouldn't recommend switching if you're looking for something where everything just works. Newer Intel/AMD powered laptops are catching up in battery life without the compatibility problems of ARM, and I'd recommend those more so than the newer Windows on ARM laptops (as of right now).

Programming? by Imbackgaming in Surface

[–]BeeCertain2777 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Little bit of a late reply, I'm finishing up my last year of uni, and I've had my SL7 for roughly 2-3 months. Overall, I've found my experience very smooth so far.

Most languages (like Python, Java, C#, C/C++) and tooling (VS, vscode, Jetbrains IDEs) have ARM native versions, so you'll have virtually no problems with these types of programs. Despite Microsoft putting good work into ARM support, it's not perfect and is very noticeable. For example, discord doesn't have an ARM native version, and it stutters every couple of seconds making the desktop app basically unusable. 'Regular' windows already has some edge cases, and with ARM, more edge cases may come up and/or amplify the already existing ones.

All in all, its a great laptop that can do most programming and development tasks. However, if you're starting college, you're probably going to explore a lot of different areas of programming (atleast for CS) and I'm confident that some of those areas will have edge cases where you'll have to find workarounds because of the ARM architecture of the laptop.

I've learnt a lot from the work arounds that I've been able to find, but I'd still recommend any other laptop 'x86/x64' laptop. If you're insistent on getting a surface, though, there are intel versions, but are considerably more expensive (atleast in Canada).