> As soon as possible, show a working demo or screenshot of what the reader will create by the end of your tutorial.
For this reason I am building a new way of writing coding tutorials, with the possibility of writing and running code snippets into the web browser including graphical apps: https://exalib.com
I suppose the difference would be whether the main point is the tutorial or the interactive platform on which it is built. The title suggests the first. I'm personally fine with this but that might be because I do use Raylib and like it very much.
Exalib is powered by https://exaequos.com and can run code snippet in the Web browser, including graphics. It is a tool for teaching computer science and programming languages
I see that WebGPU is used so it is a good candidate for being tried in https://exaequos.com, the OS I am creating and that fully runs in the web browser
ExaequOS is a Unix-like operating system that is fully running in a Web browser. It is able to run console and graphics apps developed in various languages (C, C++, Lua, Javascript, Tcl, Scheme, Forth, Uxn, Basic)
For this reason I am building a new way of writing coding tutorials, with the possibility of writing and running code snippets into the web browser including graphical apps: https://exalib.com