(no title)
s73ver_ | 8 years ago
No, they aren't.
"MacOS UI consistency is a mess."
Not really. Most small developer programs I use follow these. It makes it really easy to know what to do to accomplish something.
"Furthermore, most people do not care about this"
[Citation Needed]. I think most people would prefer to not have to learn a new UI from scratch everytime they want to use a different app.
"and the value of marketing with a sleek design vastly outweighs any benefit of conforming to system components UI."
What is this "value"? How does that help me accomplish my tasks?
"If literally every Electron app fixed memory issues and correctly placed OK/Cancel dialog buttons, I'd be fine with it for the rest of my life"
You mean, if every Electron app stopped being Electron?
Klonoar|8 years ago
I'm not going to bother listing out the litany of odd UI issues present in macOS, because you can Google it and find this within a few seconds. It comes up every. single. macOS. release.
Nobody cares about learning a new UI because most of the tools they use are webapps nowadays anyway, which require this.
The value isn't yours, if that wasn't apparent. For the vast majority of people who use apps with easier to implement design/UI/UX features, it's easier for them to get things done. These apps wouldn't have caught on without that.
And lastly, you've opted to be incredibly pedantic in an attempt to be snarky (I'm guessing, otherwise I've no clue why you'd do this). Electron is more than memory issues and this isn't even a debate.