Build native, high-performance, cross-platform desktop apps with reason!
π§ NOTE: Revery is a work-in-progress and in active development! π§
To get a taste of Revery, check out our JavaScript + WebGL build on the playground. For the best experience, though, you'll want to try a native build.
Today, Electron is one of the most popular tools for building desktop apps - using an HTML, JS, CSS stack. However, it has a heavy footprint in terms of both RAM and CPU - essentially packing an entire browser into the app. Even with that tradeoff, it has a lot of great aspects - it's the quickest way to build a cross-platform app & it provides a great development experience - as can be testified by its usage in popular apps like VSCode, Discord, and Slack.
Revery is kind of like super-fast, native code Electron - with bundled React-like/Redux-like libraries and a fast build system - all ready to go!
Revery is built with reasonml, which is a javascript-like syntax on top of OCaml This means that the language is accessible to JS developers.
Your apps are compiled to native code with the Reason / OCaml toolchain - with instant startup and performance comparable to native C code. Revery features platform-accelerated, GPU-accelerated rendering. The compiler itself is fast, too!
Revery is an experiment - can we provide a great developer experience and help teams be productive, without making sacrifices on performance?
- Consistent cross-platform behavior
A major value prop of Electron is that you can build for all platforms at once. You have great confidence as a developer that your app will look and work the same across different platforms. Revery is the same - aside from platform-specific behavior, if your app looks or behaves differently on another platform, that's a bug! As a consequence, Revery is like flutter in that it does not use native widgets. This means more work for us, but also that we have more predictable functionality cross-platform!
NOTE: If you're looking for something that does leverage native widgets, check out briskml. Another alternative is the cuite OCaml binding for Qt.
- High performance
Performance should be at the forefront, and not a compromise - we need to develop and build benchmarks that help ensure top-notch performance and start-up time.
- Type-safe, functional code
We might have some dirty mutable objects for performance - but our high-level API should be purely functional. You should be able to follow the React model of modelling your UI as a pure function of application state -> UI.
- Check out revery-quick-start to get up and running with your own Revery app!
- Try out our interactive playground
- Read through our docs
We'd love your help, and welcome PRs and contributions.
Some ideas for getting started:
- Build and run Revery
- View our Roadmap
- Help us improve our documentation
- Help us build examples
- Help us fix bugs and build features
- Help us log bugs and open issues
- Support the project on OpenCollective
- Follow us on Twitter or chat with us on Discord!
Revery is provided under the MIT License.
Revery bundles several dependencies under their own license terms - please refer to ThirdPartyLicenses.txt.
Thanks to everyone who has contributed to Revery!
Thank you to all our backers! π [Become a backer]
revery
would not be possible without a bunch of cool tech:
- ocaml made these tools possible - thanks Inria & OCaml Labs!
- reasonml made revery possible - thanks @jordwalke!
- flex by @jordwalke
- briskml
- brisk-reconciler - the "native React" implementation.
- reason-sdl2
- reason-fontkit
- reason-gl-matrix
- @reason-native/console
revery
was inspired by some awesome projects:
We don't have a Hot Reload yet but it is on our roadmap. In the meantime, you can check branch feat/hot-reload to see the progression.
In the meantime @mbernat has done a script that allow to relaunch the APP when the binary changed.