🎄 Merry Christmas & Happy New Year! ✨
Step into the season with energy, excitement, and a spark of creativity!
I built a mini Christmas app full of festive surprises and gifts 😾 the perfect way to celebrate and start the new year inspired.😂
Check it out and grab your gifts: here
Here’s to new beginnings and a year full of wins! 🥂
@bugpusher
@bugpusher
Step into the season with energy, excitement, and a spark of creativity!
I built a mini Christmas app full of festive surprises and gifts 😾 the perfect way to celebrate and start the new year inspired.😂
Check it out and grab your gifts: here
Here’s to new beginnings and a year full of wins! 🥂
@bugpusher
@bugpusher
Forwarded from Robi makes stuff (Robi)
So with that , odit.et is officially launched
been in the works since Feb 10 2025 ( almost a year )
been in my head since 2022 with this post
The app is native kotlin and the site is built with svelte 5
installation instructions here
and usage instructions here
You can finally get control over your finances because they are easy to log and easy to go thru.
from odit.et/dashboard
You can see your 2025 wrapped from
odit.et/wrapped and
You can set goals for 2026 at
odit.et/goals ( yes they will automatically update as messages come in )
odit is not on device , and is closed source , head to totals.detached.space if you want a FOSS alternative
@rb_wk for more of the stuff i built
been in the works since Feb 10 2025 ( almost a year )
been in my head since 2022 with this post
The app is native kotlin and the site is built with svelte 5
installation instructions here
and usage instructions here
You can finally get control over your finances because they are easy to log and easy to go thru.
from odit.et/dashboard
You can see your 2025 wrapped from
odit.et/wrapped and
You can set goals for 2026 at
odit.et/goals ( yes they will automatically update as messages come in )
odit is not on device , and is closed source , head to totals.detached.space if you want a FOSS alternative
@rb_wk for more of the stuff i built
Quick memory game,
It's really good and entertaining...except the jump scares
https://donitz.itch.io/pressing-under-pressure
@bugpusher
It's really good and entertaining...except the jump scares
https://donitz.itch.io/pressing-under-pressure
@bugpusher
Week 1 learning dart (flutter)
- Dart fundamentals
- Null safety
- Flutter project structure
- Hot reload & tooling
- Widget tree concept
- StatelessWidget
- StatefulWidget
- MaterialApp & Scaffold
- Basic widgets (Text, Icon, Image, Button)
@bugpusher
- Dart fundamentals
- Null safety
- Flutter project structure
- Hot reload & tooling
- Widget tree concept
- StatelessWidget
- StatefulWidget
- MaterialApp & Scaffold
- Basic widgets (Text, Icon, Image, Button)
@bugpusher
every request and am battling with RLS policies, fetch this......add that.....I RECIEVE RLS ERRORS
may GOD help us all
@bugpusher
may GOD help us all
@bugpusher
yea am starting to figure it out... Dart syntax is basically a confution between Ts + python and forced semicolon
@bugpusher
@bugpusher
Whenever I transfer money on my phone I see a sync notification on odit😂
And I get in just to admire the ui😂😂😂
@bugpusher
And I get in just to admire the ui😂😂😂
@bugpusher
Owkay Ig am "Betraying" React Native for Flutter
After a year in the React/Next.js ecosystem, I finally gave Flutter a fair shot. I didn't expect to say this, but I think I’m officially a convert. Here’s why the developer experience is winning me over:
1. True Pixel Freedom
In React Native, you’re often fighting bridge-based translations of native components. In Flutter, you own every pixel. Because Flutter paints its own UI (skia/impeller), what you see on the screen is exactly what you coded—no weird OS-specific layout shifts.
2. Hot Reload is Actually Magic
I love Fast Refresh in React, but Flutter’s Stateful Hot Reload is on another level. It doesn't just refresh the code; it maintains the app state perfectly. You can deep-dive five screens into a flow, change a color or logic, and it updates instantly without sending you back to the home screen.
3. The "Widget" Philosophy
I'll admit, the nesting felt like "callback hell" at first. But once it clicks, it’s beautiful. The consistency of "Everything is a Widget" makes UI composition feel more predictable than managing the mix of HTML-like tags and Native modules.
4. Dependency Stability (The Real MVP)
This is the biggest win for me. In the Node.js/JS world, we rely on a mountain of third-party packages maintained by random devs. One update, and your whole build breaks.
- In Flutter, the core team (Google) and the "Flutter Favorite" program ensure that the most critical plugins (Camera, Shared Preferences, Firebase) are incredibly stable and well-maintained. It feels cohesive, not fragmented.
5. It Actually Feels Native
Even though it’s not using "native components" like RN does, the performance and scrolling physics feel much more "premium" and buttery smooth out of the box.
i would suggest trying bot before picking a side
@bugpusher
After a year in the React/Next.js ecosystem, I finally gave Flutter a fair shot. I didn't expect to say this, but I think I’m officially a convert. Here’s why the developer experience is winning me over:
1. True Pixel Freedom
In React Native, you’re often fighting bridge-based translations of native components. In Flutter, you own every pixel. Because Flutter paints its own UI (skia/impeller), what you see on the screen is exactly what you coded—no weird OS-specific layout shifts.
2. Hot Reload is Actually Magic
I love Fast Refresh in React, but Flutter’s Stateful Hot Reload is on another level. It doesn't just refresh the code; it maintains the app state perfectly. You can deep-dive five screens into a flow, change a color or logic, and it updates instantly without sending you back to the home screen.
3. The "Widget" Philosophy
I'll admit, the nesting felt like "callback hell" at first. But once it clicks, it’s beautiful. The consistency of "Everything is a Widget" makes UI composition feel more predictable than managing the mix of HTML-like tags and Native modules.
4. Dependency Stability (The Real MVP)
This is the biggest win for me. In the Node.js/JS world, we rely on a mountain of third-party packages maintained by random devs. One update, and your whole build breaks.
- In Flutter, the core team (Google) and the "Flutter Favorite" program ensure that the most critical plugins (Camera, Shared Preferences, Firebase) are incredibly stable and well-maintained. It feels cohesive, not fragmented.
5. It Actually Feels Native
Even though it’s not using "native components" like RN does, the performance and scrolling physics feel much more "premium" and buttery smooth out of the box.
i would suggest trying bot before picking a side
@bugpusher
❤1
Ahh, learning new things... feeling like a complete idiot and an absolute genius at the same time.
major nostalgia.
@bugpusher
major nostalgia.
@bugpusher
imagine searching for an npm package every time you wanna use something on your app😭😭 yea its React Native, theres a very low chance am using that thing again specially for personal projects....no way
@bugpusher
@bugpusher
