New to Immediate Mode (IM) UI and trying to understand something. If all desktop applications rendered their UI in IM aiming at ~60fps+, would not that make them compete for the resources more than needed and overuse them? May I ask @cmuratori to drop a hint?
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Replying to @meglio
"Immediate" refers to the API, not the dispatch. There is no need to continuously redraw the interface if it is not animating.
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Replying to @cmuratori @meglio
Would you qualify React.js as an immediate mode API? Since the vast majority of the time you don't think of a separate init and update steps. You just say what the UI should like given the current input/state.
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Replying to @wisam910 @cmuratori
React’s API resembles the one of IM; however, under the hood it still updates the existing DOM rather than generating it “from scratch” (whatever it means for browsers). So in my understanding it looks like IM but it does not act like true IM in terms of its DOM implementation.
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Again, IM is an API design, it is not a statement about anything else.
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