Awesome
Introduction
SolidOak is a simple IDE for Rust. See the website for binary releases. It has the following features:
- An embedded copy of Neovim as its text editor
- On first launch, it will create ~/.soak and ~/.soakrc (equivalent to ~/.vim and ~/.vimrc)
- It starts off in "Easy Mode" (locked in insert mode) for Vim newbies, but you can toggle it off
- An easy-to-use GUI written with gtk-rs
- Buttons for common editing actions and a project tree that stays in sync with Neovim
- You can bypass the GUI and run it as a console app by passing the
-nw
flag
Build Instructions
Note: If neovim fails to build, try cloning it directly and running make libnvim
to get more specific errors.
Linux (apt-get)
apt-get install libgtk-3-dev libglib2.0-dev libcairo2-dev libvte-2.91-dev
apt-get install libtool-bin autoconf automake cmake libncurses5-dev g++ pkg-config unzip
cargo build --release
Linux (yum)
yum install gtk3-devel glib2-devel vte291-devel
yum install autoconf automake cmake gcc gcc-c++ libtool ncurses-devel pkgconfig
cargo build --release
OS X (homebrew)
brew install gtk+3 vte3
brew install libtool automake cmake pkg-config gettext
cargo build --release
OS X (macports)
port install gtk3 vte
port install libtool automake cmake pkgconfig gettext
cargo build --release
Windows
The following instructions are a work in progress. Building does not currently work because msys2 does not contain a package for vte.
Install MSYS2 and run this in its shell:
pacman -S mingw-w64-x86_64-gtk3
In cmd.exe, install Rust's GNU toolchain and build:
rustup install stable-gnu
set RUSTUP_TOOLCHAIN=stable-x86_64-pc-windows-gnu
cargo build --release
Licensing
All files that originate from this project are dedicated to the public domain. I would love pull requests, and will assume that they are also dedicated to the public domain.