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Show HN: Horizon – GPU-accelerated infinite-canvas terminal in Rust

66 pointsby petersundeyesterday at 6:14 PM26 commentsview on HN

Tabs, splits, and tmux work fine until you have several projects open with logs, tests, and long-running shells. I kept rebuilding context instead of resuming work. Horizon puts shells on an infinite canvas. You can arrange them into workspaces and reopen later with layout, scrollback, and history intact.

Built in 3 days with Claude/Codex, dogfooding the workflow as I went. Feedback and contributions welcome.


Comments

tekacsyesterday at 7:32 PM

This is fun! I switched to https://github.com/manaflow-ai/cmux for a while, but had to switch back to Ghostty due to its unreliability, high memory and CPU usage and a bunch of bugs.

This makes a lot of sense, but... it'd be great to allow pulling out of a canvas into a second canvas for those of us with multiple screens (you at least end up needing one window per screen).

In general it feels like... more structure rather than less feels like it'd be the smoothest experience. I'll play with your Ctrl+K shortcut and see if it ends up feeling like I can get everywhere that I need quickly.

But... nice work!

Note for jj users like me: you need to `git lfs pull` if you want to `cargo run --release`!

Update: No luck creating any 'shell' workspaces (it looks like you use GNU-only flags to script) – I'll push a fix once I find it.

Also: the AGENTS.md is wrong JFYI - it points to portable-pty, when this is using alacritty_terminal's tty (on rustix-openpty)

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rcarmotoday at 7:52 AM

Very nice. I tried to solve this with https://github.com/rcarmo/webterm but without the fancy visuals (although mine works inside the Oculus Quest if you’re so inclined :))

skeledrewtoday at 7:39 AM

I've been hurting for something like this for a while now. Many tmux windows soon become unwieldy to switch among, same as having a bunch of terminal tabs, and I have an unhealthy mix of both. Hopefully this scratches the itch.

ms_menardiyesterday at 8:36 PM

This is great! Two things I noticed immediately:

the settings window overlaps with the minimap.

I think it'd be neat if you could zoom? The reason I'd use this over a tiling window manager is to fit more terminals on a screen at once. I think if there was a capability like the Strategic Zoom in Supreme Commander (video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9hJY7exr9KU) it would be much easier to manage many terminals at once, and take advantage of the infinite canvas.

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phrmendesyesterday at 11:42 PM

Just use Tmux

hokkosyesterday at 10:10 PM

The last thing I want is the figma experience for my terminal

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cadamsdotcomyesterday at 8:18 PM

Maybe I’m old but this sounds like MDI (multiple-document interface) of the late 90s.

Went the way of the dodo probably because it’s hard for non power users to grok.

But this is a power user tool - seeems like a fit!

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riquitotoday at 12:02 AM

I love these kind of projects trying out non mainstream approaches! Thanks for sharing

fritzoyesterday at 8:28 PM

I was hoping this would be an infinite length terminal view, like the opening backstory in Star Wars

cedwsyesterday at 8:43 PM

Spatial memory is really underutilised in computing.

When libghostty[0] releases maybe you could use that so you don't have to build everything from scratch.

[0]: https://mitchellh.com/writing/libghostty-is-coming

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ogborstadtoday at 8:26 AM

Love it!

sakopovyesterday at 8:44 PM

Will there be any built releases available?

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iknowstufftoday at 12:34 AM

Hmm I guess I’d like my terminal to remember my shell sessions like that and just lef me open them in multiple windows so I can use my window manager to arrange as I please.

And then I’d like my window manager to be infinitely scrollable like a canvas with like 3 fingers on my touchpad. Do any exist like that?

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tamimiotoday at 1:22 AM

Amazing, I will give it a try!

I played with egui before, I really enjoyed it, but I remember I stumbled across some issues had to use dioxus instead.

jauntywundrkindyesterday at 9:13 PM

Feels very Niri like, in a positive way. Niri's "scrollable" interface always has room to the right & down!

One of the Niri tools I built for myself is to let me insert a new row up top, to expand up. Thats afaik not super easy in base Niri, constraints the spatial growth some.

I'm pretty close to having some persistence of terminal windows, tmux, etc in Niri, with some tools to dump current state nicely. Doing an actual restore operation would be a good thing to build towards.