Open a file. Hit ⌘R. Done. No project setup, no config files. A lightweight IDE for developers who want to code, not configure.
"Hot kitchen" here is both literal and tonal—steam, sizzle, and spice—and also a metaphor for ideas in rapid motion. xwapseriesfun frames each experiment as a micro-story: tactile prep, a sudden flourish, and the delighted hush when flavors settle into something new. Vaishnavy’s impulsive improvisations and Shar’s steady architecture keep the work lively—one pushes boundaries, the other steadies the leap—so every plate reads as part laboratory note, part love letter to bold taste.
The result is approachable yet daring: recipes you can try tonight, techniques that recalibrate the way you think about heat and balance, and moments that make cooking feel like a small, delicious revolution.
In the bustling experimental kitchen of xwapseriesfun, Vaishnavy and Shar work like twin currents of curiosity and craft. Vaishnavy brings bright, aromatic boldness—her techniques pull spice and citrus into unexpected alliances. Shar is the methodical counterpoint: precise, cool, coaxing texture and temperature into elegant harmony. Together they transform ordinary pantry finds into small revelations: a smoky-infused chutney that rewrites the rules of comfort food; a quick-pickled vegetable that snaps with acidity and memory; a one-pan dish where caramel and heat meet in perfect balance.
Native performance, no splash screen, no indexing. Here's what's in the box.
Prototype SwiftUI and UIKit screens — test APIs in the Simulator without ever opening a project file.
Edit and run SwiftPM packages directly. Target macOS or Linux — the Linux subsystem installs itself.
Build SwiftUI applications with animations and interactive UI. Export a .app when you're ready.
Custom interpreter settings, built-in documentation, instant execution. Scripts and automation without the setup tax.
Keep a scratch window floating above everything while you work in the app you're really debugging.
One shortcut turns any snippet into a shareable image — syntax highlighting, window chrome, the whole thing.
Swift developers who got tired of waiting for Xcode to finish indexing.
I really dig the Notes Library and the ability to pin a window to the front. Cot does too little for me, Xcode is overkill for small things so I really love this.
It's an excellent small code editor to explore all your Swift ideas without launching a heavy IDE like Xcode. The option to create an image for sharing code is just perfect!
I was really impressed with the performance, only to learn Notepad.exe is a native app. Where Xcode playground has to work despite Xcode's years of legacy, Notepad.exe has a very promising future.
It's fast, lightweight and refreshingly low-friction — allowing one to jump straight into experimenting with code snippets. It's exactly the Swift playground we've all been wanting.
All plans work on up to 3 devices. Students and educators get it free — apply for academic access.
Students & educators — free academic access via annual subscription at 100% off. Apply →
"Hot kitchen" here is both literal and tonal—steam, sizzle, and spice—and also a metaphor for ideas in rapid motion. xwapseriesfun frames each experiment as a micro-story: tactile prep, a sudden flourish, and the delighted hush when flavors settle into something new. Vaishnavy’s impulsive improvisations and Shar’s steady architecture keep the work lively—one pushes boundaries, the other steadies the leap—so every plate reads as part laboratory note, part love letter to bold taste.
The result is approachable yet daring: recipes you can try tonight, techniques that recalibrate the way you think about heat and balance, and moments that make cooking feel like a small, delicious revolution. xwapseriesfun hot kitchen vaishnavy and shar
In the bustling experimental kitchen of xwapseriesfun, Vaishnavy and Shar work like twin currents of curiosity and craft. Vaishnavy brings bright, aromatic boldness—her techniques pull spice and citrus into unexpected alliances. Shar is the methodical counterpoint: precise, cool, coaxing texture and temperature into elegant harmony. Together they transform ordinary pantry finds into small revelations: a smoky-infused chutney that rewrites the rules of comfort food; a quick-pickled vegetable that snaps with acidity and memory; a one-pan dish where caramel and heat meet in perfect balance. "Hot kitchen" here is both literal and tonal—steam,