Matthias Endler
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
It was a great chat. Rustium Production is a podcast by Corot. It is hosted by me, Matthias Endler, and produced by Simon BrΓΌggen. For show notes, transcripts, and to learn more about how we can help your company make the most of Rust, visit corot.dev. Thanks for listening to Rustium Production.
It was a great chat. Rustium Production is a podcast by Corot. It is hosted by me, Matthias Endler, and produced by Simon BrΓΌggen. For show notes, transcripts, and to learn more about how we can help your company make the most of Rust, visit corot.dev. Thanks for listening to Rustium Production.
This is Rust in Production, a podcast about companies who use Rust to shape the future of infrastructure. My name is Matthias Endler from Corot, and today we're talking to Conrad Irvin from Zed about building a high-performance code editor in Rust. Conrad, thanks for being here. Can you quickly introduce yourself and Zed, the company you work for?
This is Rust in Production, a podcast about companies who use Rust to shape the future of infrastructure. My name is Matthias Endler from Corot, and today we're talking to Conrad Irvin from Zed about building a high-performance code editor in Rust. Conrad, thanks for being here. Can you quickly introduce yourself and Zed, the company you work for?
This is Rust in Production, a podcast about companies who use Rust to shape the future of infrastructure. My name is Matthias Endler from Corot, and today we're talking to Conrad Irvin from Zed about building a high-performance code editor in Rust. Conrad, thanks for being here. Can you quickly introduce yourself and Zed, the company you work for?
It's pretty amazing. I have to say, I'm a set user myself. I completely switched from VS Code. And I can tell you the experience so far is fantastic. You did a great job. And this is also why I wanted to talk to you folks. First off, in your words... What's wrong with the existing editors? What are some pain points? Why do we need another editor?
It's pretty amazing. I have to say, I'm a set user myself. I completely switched from VS Code. And I can tell you the experience so far is fantastic. You did a great job. And this is also why I wanted to talk to you folks. First off, in your words... What's wrong with the existing editors? What are some pain points? Why do we need another editor?
It's pretty amazing. I have to say, I'm a set user myself. I completely switched from VS Code. And I can tell you the experience so far is fantastic. You did a great job. And this is also why I wanted to talk to you folks. First off, in your words... What's wrong with the existing editors? What are some pain points? Why do we need another editor?
I guess you hear that a lot, but I want to hear the answer from you. Makes sense.
I guess you hear that a lot, but I want to hear the answer from you. Makes sense.
I guess you hear that a lot, but I want to hear the answer from you. Makes sense.
If Z didn't exist, which editor would you use?
If Z didn't exist, which editor would you use?
If Z didn't exist, which editor would you use?
Yeah, and you did a great job there. I have to say there are very few gaps in the Vim support by now. It wasn't the case just half a year ago, but just seeing the rapid development is really, really good, really surprising. And also I found myself switching between VS Code and NeoVim as well.
Yeah, and you did a great job there. I have to say there are very few gaps in the Vim support by now. It wasn't the case just half a year ago, but just seeing the rapid development is really, really good, really surprising. And also I found myself switching between VS Code and NeoVim as well.
Yeah, and you did a great job there. I have to say there are very few gaps in the Vim support by now. It wasn't the case just half a year ago, but just seeing the rapid development is really, really good, really surprising. And also I found myself switching between VS Code and NeoVim as well.
So every time I became sick of VS Code's laggy performance, I would switch to NeoVim only to find out that the configuration was a bit of a hassle. And so I have to switch back at some point. Exactly.
So every time I became sick of VS Code's laggy performance, I would switch to NeoVim only to find out that the configuration was a bit of a hassle. And so I have to switch back at some point. Exactly.
So every time I became sick of VS Code's laggy performance, I would switch to NeoVim only to find out that the configuration was a bit of a hassle. And so I have to switch back at some point. Exactly.