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README: fix typos
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@ -260,7 +260,7 @@ will come soon in a future update.
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Ghostty is a cross-platform terminal emulator but we don't aim for a
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least-common-denominator experience. There is a large, shared core written
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in Zig but we do a lot of platform-native thing:
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in Zig but we do a lot of platform-native things:
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* The macOS app is a true SwiftUI-based application with all the things you
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would expect such as real windowing, menu bars, a settings GUI, etc.
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@ -301,7 +301,7 @@ $ zig-out/bin/ghostty
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This will build a binary for the currently running system (if supported).
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**Note: macOS does not result in a runnable binary with this command.**
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macOS builds produce a library (`libghostty.a`) that is used by the Xcode
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project in the `macos` directory to produce the finally `Ghostty.app`.
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project in the `macos` directory to produce the final `Ghostty.app`.
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On Linux or macOS, you can use `zig build -Dapp-runtime=glfw run` for a quick
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GLFW-based app for a faster development cycle while developing core
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@ -312,7 +312,7 @@ tasks.
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Other useful commands:
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* `zig build test` for running unit tests.
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* `zig build run -Dconformance=<name>` run a conformance test case from
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* `zig build run -Dconformance=<name>` runs a conformance test case from
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the `conformance` directory. The `name` is the name of the file. This runs
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in the current running terminal emulator so if you want to check the
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behavior of this project, you must run this command in ghostty.
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@ -357,7 +357,7 @@ This app will be not be signed or notarized. Note that
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that are both signed and notarized.
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When running the app, logs are available via macOS unified logging such
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as `Console.app`. The easiest way I've found is to just use the CLI:
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as `Console.app`. The easiest way I've found to view these is to just use the CLI:
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```sh
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$ sudo log stream --level debug --predicate 'subsystem=="com.mitchellh.ghostty"'
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