Show HN: I rebuilt the only parts of my IDE I use, in Rust, over a weekend
31 points by kyle-ssg 6 hours ago | 41 comments
I don't know Rust.

Friday after work I realised that 90% of my IDE time now is just the commit/diff view — and even good IDEs feel heavy for that.

So over the weekend I built a dedicated native tool for just that. Kyde is a macOS git commit + diff editor with one goal: be fast, do Git well.

I'm curious whether anyone else mostly opens their IDE for git operations these days.

It's open source, and there's a signed app in Releases.


achandlerwhite 2 hours ago
Forced dark theme -- please don't punish me for having astigmatism--can't do dark mode
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sshine 34 minutes ago
I like how it looks.

But the terminal already has excellent diff and commit tools.

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kyle-ssg 30 minutes ago
Fair enough. I always switch to my IDE for a big branch, actually that's why I never switched VSCode, I liked my original IDEs Git UI. But maybe that's just muscle memory using the same IDE from Java to web over the years.
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danielrmay 2 hours ago
What might you build when you let Claude take care of commits? :-)
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satvikpendem 2 hours ago
This is basically what the agentic apps do already right? Like Codex, Claude Desktop, Copilot etc. Except with those I can also write commands to the AI as well as review their output all in one app rather than multiple.
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kyle-ssg 2 hours ago
Hey, by this do you mean viewing a diff of before and after? If so I get what you mean, but given how important the review is pre-PR I do always come back to IDE.
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asadm 2 hours ago
This is amazing and I will use this! Does it support git submodules? I like how VSCode divides changes into buckets across all git repos in current workspace, I can commit each separately from one sidebar.
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kyle-ssg 2 hours ago
Hey! That's actually something I haven't checked, none of my active projects use them. I expect it won't break but I haven't designed the diff to account for that. I will take a look though it's a great point.
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asadm 2 hours ago
Great. Otherwise I will find time to send a PR sometime.
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kyle-ssg 2 hours ago
<3
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Maledictus 2 hours ago
great idea! this use case is the only reason left why I start VS codium.
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kyle-ssg 41 minutes ago
Thanks! Yep same with my IDE.
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tiesp 4 hours ago
UI looks great
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kyle-ssg 4 hours ago
Oh thanks that's made my day haha!
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mathieudombrock 2 hours ago
Why would you choose to have the ai use a language you don't understand? Isn't this basically admitting you had nothing to do with this project and anyone else could pay an ai to make the same thing easily?

Is this something you expect other people to use?

Are you planning to maintain this?

Are you making a point about ai capabilities?

Is this just a joke?

I guess I don't really understand the point of posts like this.

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kyle-ssg 44 minutes ago
I'm making a point about IDEs, I think their usefulness is declining. No, I do not expect other people to use this, but they can and I will.
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noncoml 7 minutes ago
> Isn't this basically admitting you had nothing to do with this project

No. They had nothing to do with the code. The project is not only the code.

> and anyone else could pay an ai to make the same thing easily?

This assumes that the difficult part is typing code, but in reality the most difficult part is to know what to build, specify it, evaluate and iterate on it.

If it were truly as easy as asking an AI once, then everyone would already be shipping successful products daily.

AI just lowers the bar to entry.

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smt88 3 hours ago
The primary value of IDEs in the agentic era are: debugging, code review (with good diffing), and management of the agent’s context. I also use mine for browsing databases, but not everyone does that.

You seem to have one of those three. I’m not sure what your coding background is, but debuggers/profilers are incredibly useful and important, and it’s essentially malpractice for a developer never to use them.

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M4R5H4LL 2 hours ago
Such a cringy and unpleasant statement... OP is smart to adjust to change. I have hand-written software for the past 30 years, and the moment I stop using my IDE, you’d tell me don’t know what I am doing?? Dude, I probably was writing assembly code by hand when there were no IDEs and you were still trying to figure out the taste of Play-Doh. Some people really need to put their head in the right place.
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smt88 53 minutes ago
This response is so strange and unrelated to what I wrote, it feels like you're not even responding to me in the first place.

> OP is smart to adjust to change

When did I tell OP not to change? My comment was about how my own workflow has changed radically in the last couple of years.

> the moment I stop using my IDE, you’d tell me don’t know what I am doing??

What? I didn't do anything of the sort.

> Dude, I probably was writing assembly code by hand when there were no IDEs and you were still trying to figure out the taste of Play-Doh

This is incredibly childish. If you really are as old as you imply, the cringe is all you, friend.

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xtracto 2 hours ago
>but debuggers/profilers are incredibly useful and important, and it’s essentially malpractice for a developer never to use them.

Just wait for the moment you need to write code for an embedded platform that doesn't have a debugging mechanism.

I've been programming for more than 30 years. Funnily, I used to use debuggers A LOT (in Borland Turbo C++ DOS "IDE" times, Visual Basic, Eclipse, Netbeans, Adobe Flash Builder, etc). But nowadays I seldomly use the debugger, if at all.

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smt88 51 minutes ago
> Just wait for the moment you need to write code for an embedded platform that doesn't have a debugging mechanism.

Very close to 0% of programmers on this site are doing this. The vast majority are writing JavaScript/TypeScript, Python, or some other high-level language and targeting web platforms.

> But nowadays I seldomly use the debugger, if at all.

That might be fine for you and your use cases, but it's not fine for CRUD app developers who are essentially passing and mutating data around databases and state machines.

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kyle-ssg 3 hours ago
Hey! I'm a web and mobile developer for past 12 years and have wrote quite a lot of code over the years (github for receipts). I actually even written a mobile application profiler, it's on GitHub.

Debugging and profiling has always been outside of the IDE for me, except when I started out as a Java Developer.

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smt88 47 minutes ago
My point was not at all to accuse you of using the wrong tools, but rather to point out that your rebuilt IDE is missing something very valuable (combining the debugging and editing experience).

I don't and have never understood why someone spins up a full-weight IDE and then not used that same GUI to manage their debugger, since you get a lot of added benefits from that (being able to copy/paste from the editor to code evaluation/REPL for example).

I wasn't trying to criticize this early work at all. It looks like a fun and promising project!

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kyle-ssg 32 minutes ago
Hey, no worries, I don't think you were criticising! I guess this IDE was prominently started for me, and I wouldn't use an internal debugger vs debugging in Chrome for example. I think if I added one, the debugger would be opt-in/installable rather than always bundled.
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johnfn 3 hours ago
It is a little crazy to accuse people not using the dev tools you like of malpractice.
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smt88 55 minutes ago
"Debugger" is not just a "dev tool I like." It's the only way to see what a program is doing while it's doing it, unless you're just writing to your console and hoping you captured enough state with your write statements.

I understand there are people who haven't used debuggers before and don't know what they're missing out on, but there's no excuse for that anymore because it's become much easier to set them up and use them.

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mhitza 2 hours ago
Woah woah, temper down the assertion my friend!

Profiling is a tool meant for processes that relate to performance, or hot spots. Debuggers when integrated well[1], are great tools but compete with print based debugging which is a much more general skill one uses and needs to learn.

Let's reserve malpraxis considerations for writing code without any true thought given for security, privacy, accessibility and human rights affected.

[1] and I don't like the interface of any of the debuggers I used. Except maybe in ghci, if I had the patience to script a Tcl/Tk frontend one day.

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asadm 2 hours ago
what kind of noob uses debugger from within their IDE?
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mrits 2 hours ago
I got out of the habit of leaning on debuggers with first making sure I'm not lacking in logging. I can't remember the last time I actually needed to set a break point.
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spiralcoaster 2 hours ago
Actual title: I had Claude code up a diff tool in Rust over the weekend

My guess is this made it to the front page solely from the Rust boost.

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iLoveOncall 2 hours ago
That's just too funny, even the README is entirely vibe-coded and the label under the image doesn't describe AT ALL the content of the image:

> ~120fps scrolling a 37k-line package-lock.json — viewport virtualization + off-thread highlighting.

When it's a static PNG of an extremely small diff.

I'm flagging the post as spam, that's what it is.

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kyle-ssg 51 minutes ago
Hey, actually there's a script that generates the screenshots so that I don't have to adjust them every time the UI changes. I do get 120fps with a 37k line package-lock, try it yourself if you don't believe me.
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asadm 2 hours ago
> I had Claude code up

What's the difference?

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locke3891 30 minutes ago
You don't know the difference between "I painted a picture" and "I asked Samantha to paint this picture"?
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bdcravens 2 hours ago
To some, it's less authentic. In my mind, it's like "building" a house, when the truth it, you orchestrated contractors who did the actual work. A different set of skills, not necessarily less impressive, but probably is depending on the audience. (In my example, you wouldn't want to shoulder way into a group of tradesmen and talk about your building prowess)
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applfanboysbgon 2 hours ago
The difference is that the resulting software is useless, buggy, unpolished, will only be used by the person who prompted it and only for about three days before they get tired of it, and that nothing was learned.
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mathieudombrock 2 hours ago
That's what I'm not getting about these kinds of posts. What is the point of sharing this? It's just a bunch of nothing.
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kyle-ssg 2 hours ago
Hey, actually my goal is to stop using my IDE, it'll be one less subscription for me. So I won't get tired of this, I plan on using it daily. I've spent quite a few years obsessing over software quality so I won't accept unpolished and buggy!
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applfanboysbgon 59 minutes ago
Everyone who vibe codes something over the weekend thinks that their vibe coded software will be the greatest thing since sliced bread. Then they realise that as they continue prompting, it takes disproportionately large amounts of effort to see any progress as program complexity rises and the token predictor begins tripping over itself more and more. At least use it daily for a month rather than saying you plan to use it, then try showing it. If you could actually get through a month of using and prompting on the project without getting tired of it, that would already put you ahead of 99.9999% of vibe-coded projects. As it is, literally anyone could prompt for this over a weekend, so what value does showing this have?
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kyle-ssg 48 minutes ago
I do agree with some of this principle, if I sat blasting prompts with all the things I could think of, of course it won't end well. Strong regression tests and good patterns are needed.

RE a month usage, that is a good idea, I will use it for a month and do a more long-form post.

I've been using it since I started building it, and have not touched my IDE, thats the goal. All commits to the repository have been made via the tool itself.

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