Per a brief discussion with @r3econ in #2803 (comment), he agreed it would be worth it to file and he'd try to give a look when he has a chance to see if this is just how flutter works or if it's an easy tiny refactor
Context:
let's use safari on iOS. When you pull to refresh you feel the haptic as you're pulling down.
For some reason, maybe it's a result of the app being built in flutter, the haptic in lichess beta, you don't feel until after it's released which feels a little less natural than how it's handled throughout the rest of the iOS ecosystem. And it feels a little weaker/less full.
Per a brief discussion with @r3econ in #2803 (comment), he agreed it would be worth it to file and he'd try to give a look when he has a chance to see if this is just how flutter works or if it's an easy tiny refactor
Context:
let's use safari on iOS. When you pull to refresh you feel the haptic as you're pulling down.
For some reason, maybe it's a result of the app being built in flutter, the haptic in lichess beta, you don't feel until after it's released which feels a little less natural than how it's handled throughout the rest of the iOS ecosystem. And it feels a little weaker/less full.