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Discussion (3 Comments)Read Original on HackerNews
https://vittorioromeo.com/index/blog/vrsfml.html
That said, even for those uses SDL2 (much less SDL3) caught up to SFML about 6-7 years ago in usability issues for people without experience coding at that level. Circa 2015, SFML was the easier route to both performance and a working cross-platform binary. That hasn't been true for a long time now, even when SFML started to get refurbished around 2021/2022. The only times I've come across SFML since 2017/2018 have been projects migrating off of it and onto SDL 2 or 3.
It's good to have both SFML and SDL, among other C++ options and other-language frameworks. Even looking at 3.1, I don't think I'd recommend SFML now, especially not for the same reasons I might've done it 10 years ago. But it's good to see them modernizing anyway, and changes like this might make it easier to update and maintain old or abandoned projects that still use SFML.