2.3 KiB
Frequently Asked Questions about Ladybird
What does 'Independent' mean, if you're including third party dependencies?
Independent means:
- We implement the web platform standards ourselves
- We don't take money from anyone with strings attached
Windows support when?
There are very few Windows developers contributing to the project. As such, maintaining a native Windows port would be a lot of effort that distracts from building out the web platform standards in a reasonable amount of time.
After we have a solid foundation, we may consider a Windows port, but it's not a priority. In the meantime, Windows developers can use other tools such as WSL2 to work on Ladybird.
Will Ladybird support $THING
?
Eventually, probably, if there's a Web Spec for it!
When will you implement $THING
?
Maybe someday. Maybe never. If you want to see something happen, you can do it yourself!
Well, how do I run this thing then?
Simple, my friend! Just refer to the build instructions.
I did a git pull
and now the build is broken! What do I do?
If it builds on CI, it should build for you too. You may need to rebuild the toolchain. If that doesn't help, try it with a clean repo.
If you can't figure out what to do, ask in the #build-problems
channel on Discord.
Where did Ladybird come from?
For full details, see the Ladybird: A new cross-platform browser project announcement from 12 September 2022.
Here’s a very short summary: Work on what eventually became Ladybird started on 15 June 2019, as LibHTML — the beginnings of an HTML viewer for SerenityOS — with a commit titled “LibHTML: Start working on a simple HTML library”, and with this commit description:
I'd like to have rich text, and we might as well use HTML for that. :^)
LibHTML eventually became LibWeb — which in turn eventually grew into being the core part of the browser engine and browser to which, on 4 July 2022, the name Ladybird was given.