@lduboeuf & @kugiigi
Yes I do have yes, I do have spell checking, auto correction and spell checking enabled but the functionality is a bit odd.
Lets take the worst case scenario: I write a misspelled word, I press space to insert a space and move on, autocorrect corrects the word, but it is still selected, no space, I press space again, the now correctly spelled word is unselected but still no space, I press space for the third time, now I get a space and can continue writing. Expected behavior: once I press space, autocorrect should change the word and insert a space. Conversely, if I actually go and select the word from the suggestions list, a trailing space should not be inserted. Finally, this is probably a bug, but when deleting the last letter of a word, leading spaces have also been removed contracting two words in to one, although this one has been rare and I have only encountered it 3-4 times.
Since I primarily write longish notes consisting of short sentences and lots of commas, the combination of these behaviors can make me spend more than half my time managing spaces instead of actually typing something new.
@kugiigi I am using both, but I prefer Sapot. Although Morp now has a tab feature, it's a bit messy So the Sapot has the better interface at the moment. When I tried just now, the only think I could do in either browser was swipe up to access the tabs menu/change tab. Sapot did this fine, morph... well it would either scroll, change tabs or open the tabs list but there were little consistency in what option it chose.
Now there are not only valid but also good reasons to have the UI and gestures set up the way UT does, like easier access to applications which is why I called it a bright idea. However there are better reasons no to, like expectations (the horizontal plane has been use for media manipulation since at least 3.11 in desktops probably longer) leaving manipulation to be button based or competing for the very limited horizontal screen real estate in mobiles. Consistency, not knowing what a swipe does. And finally with the OS functions taking up 3/4 of the screen, it leaves little for the apps, sure some apps can implement meaningful functionality but generally it just detracts from usability.
But hey, Ive given it a really good spin and I just thought I'd leave at least some feedback, because at least consistency within the current design framework would benefit everyone. At least my like or dislike of said framework is irrelevant. But yeah, Ill probably be giving Postmarket a try next.