Hi everyone! Sorry, I forgot about last week’s “Ask me anything” session, so let’s use this post as usual: you reply with questions and I’ll answer them.

Moreover, I would like to give you some news about the project roadmap. I did not forgot to release a stable version, actually 1.13.3 is expected by the end of the year. In the meantime I’ve been focusing mostly on technical improvements, refactoring and code cleanup. For example I made dependency injection and gradle scripts much more maintainable, and I’ve been fixing a couple of issues that you reported.

Once I’m done with some more bugs (e.g. the ones concerning images) I’ll be releasing, so don’t worry. If some of you are willing to test the beta releases, you are more than welcome, thanks.

As always #livefasteattrash 🦝🦝🦝

2 points

Sorry, I know this AMA is a few months old but there’s no more recent one.

Just wondering if there will be support for custom emojis in the comments, like Hexbear’s emojis? I don’t mean an emoji selector, I just mean being able to see them properly. They are mostly not loading or loading in a really broken way. I previously used Eternity and they all showed up perfectly, not sure what the difference or issue is though.

I just started using this recently and I’m really enjoying it. Thanks!

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2 points

I am sorry, there have always been issues, especially with animated ones, I’ll investigate into it more when I have a little time.

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1 point

No worries, nothing to apologize for. I am really enjoying the app! Thank you so much for your work on it!

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Raccoon for Lemmy app

!raccoonforlemmyapp@lemmy.world

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This community is dedicated to the discussion about the Raccoon for Lemmy mobile app. Raccoon is an open source app powered by Kotlin Multiplatform (KMP) and Compose Multiplatform (CMP) which intends not only to provide a mobile client for Lemmy, but also to create a space where users’ voice is listened to, and we grow together by exchanging opinions.

Main features:

  • view post feed and comments with different listing and sort types;
  • possibility to upvote and downvote (with configurable swipe actions);
  • community and user detail (with info about moderators/moderated communities);
  • user profile with one’s own posts, comments and saved items;
  • inbox with replies, mentions and direct messages;
  • global search with different result types (all, posts, comments, user, communities);
  • create and edit new posts (with optional images);
  • cross-post contents to other communities;
  • reply to post and comments (and edit replies);
  • mark posts as read (even while scrolling) and hide read contents;
  • custom appearance (color scheme, fonts, text sizes, post layout, etc.);
  • custom localization (independent of system settings);
  • block users, communities and instances;
  • report post and comments to moderators;
  • support for multiple accounts with account-specific settings;
  • lazy scrolling (referred to as “zombie mode”);
  • explore all the communities on a given instance in guest mode;
  • multi-community (community aggregation);
  • view the moderation log;
  • community moderation tool (examine and resolve reports, ban users, feature posts in community, block further comments from posts, mark comments as distinguished, remove posts/comments, review all created posts/comments, edit/create community);
  • save drafts for posts and comments;
  • anonymous mode with quick instance switch;
  • admin tools (purge users/posts/comments/communities, feature posts locally, hide/unhide communities).

Why was the project started?

  • experimenting and testing Kotlin Multiplatform and Compose Multiplatform in a real world project, to explore what could be achieved with multiplatform libraries and share as much code as possible in the commonMain source directory;
  • offering a feature rich Lemmy client mainly aimed at both beginners and “pro” users, i.e. users who are not content with just browsing the contents of the Fediverse, creating posts and answers but be able to customize the app and “feel at home”;
  • dig deeper inside Lemmy’s internals and understand better what it is like to work with a decentralized platform.

We believe that Lemmy has a lot of potential and part of its success depends on users being able to enjoy the experience on robust and well-done clients. Moreover, encouraging discussion between people is important to develop a healthy and tolerant society where everyone’s right and freedom are safeguarded. To know more, have a look at the Procyon Project’s manifesto.

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