During this Christmas holiday, Mitchell Hashimoto launched Ghostty.
Upon its release, Ghostty quickly gained attention - not only because of Mitchell Hashimoto's identity (the founder of HashiCorp), but also because of the quality of Ghostty itself, which stirred the stagnant world of terminal emulators.
As a prime example of "Build in Public", Mitchell recently appeared on the Changelog podcast, a 100-minute episode where he shared many interesting stories, including insights into the birth, goals, and development process of the Ghostty project.
Here are some of the fun facts about Ghostty from the podcast:
Mitchell, the founder of HashiCorp, had been working in server-side development before leaving the company in 2023.
He has always loved coding, and after leaving HashiCorp, he wanted to explore something new and different from his previous work. For him, this meant working on "non-infrastructure", "non-server-side", "desktop software", which led to the creation of Ghostty.
The potential of the terminal has not been fully explored, and there are only a few terminal emulators on the market. In contrast, there are hundreds of browsers (and the number continues to grow!).
Mitchell wanted to create a terminal that was superior in every aspect.
Ghostty is developed as a native application, with specific optimizations for each platform, going all the way down to instruction-level architecture.
For instance, on Apple Silicon, it uses proprietary ARM instructions, and on Intel, it uses SIMD instructions.
For rendering, Ghostty uses the Metal framework on macOS and OpenGL on Linux.
Can the terminal's capabilities be expanded?
Is it possible to open HTML or PDF files directly within the terminal? Why leave the terminal environment?
Influence.
Since no one has focused on improving the terminal, Ghostty can take on this role and, in some way, impact the entire ecosystem, fostering a sustainable community.
This is why libghostty
is important - Mitchell doesn't want Ghostty to be the only terminal program. In the future, anyone should be able to develop their own terminal program - whether for iOS, Android, or any other platform - without needing to reinvent the core.
Mitchell wanted to spend more time with his young daughter, who was only a few months old at the time.
He could only squeeze in time to write code when she was asleep.
Zig was chosen because it is fun to work with. While Rust is also a great language, it's not that fun.
Fonts.
About 70% of the development time went into font rendering.
The other 30% was spent on building the terminal emulator and - selecting a satisfying default font.
"It's one of those things where I described it like a retina screen that Apple shipped. you don't realize how good it is until you use it." -- Mitchell Hashimoto
Listening to the entire podcast, it’s clear how passionate Mitchell is, as well as his continuous drive to push boundaries: Why does the terminal have to be the way it is? Why can't it be better?
Finally, thank you, Mitchell!
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