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Porting a cross-platform GUI application to Rust - Mozilla Hacks - the Web developer blog
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I based my suggestion based on the logical requirement stated (first quote) which was later ignored (second quote).
I didn't make any specific claims about imaginary reliability score points.
I know they call it a requirement, but it has the phrase "as little as possible." If that were taken as broadly as it could be, it would not be written in Rust or C++, since, after all, there might be a standard library problem that takes Firefox and the crash reporter both down.
The stated requirement is "don't use Firefox's code." GTK is not Firefox's code, and the code paths exercised by Firefox are going to be different than the ones exercised by this crash reporter. Besides, a lot of people use GNOME, XFCE, or LXDE: if GTK as a whole is borked, then you wouldn't even be able to start Firefox under these environments, much less crash it.
Also, they list other requirements, not just that one (it's not a requirement if it uses words like "minimal," because there's no definite test to see if you've met the requirement or not; these are all desirables).
They downplay it in this list, but I'm pretty sure a11y is the biggest non-negotiable requirement, so Iced is out of the picture.
Slint, on the other hand, is not a small library at all, and it only has full functionality if it pulls in Qt. There might not be a clear-cut, definite criteria for "minimize the use of external code," but pulling in Qt definitely doesn't count.