PdVst
egui_node_graph
PdVst | egui_node_graph | |
---|---|---|
1 | 6 | |
14 | 688 | |
- | - | |
10.0 | 4.6 | |
over 1 year ago | about 1 month ago | |
C | Rust | |
- | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
PdVst
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Pure Data as a plugin, with a new GUI
I think the first project of this kind was pdvst~ (https://github.com/jyg/PdVst). A more recent effort is Camomile (https://github.com/pierreguillot/Camomile).
PlugData seems to be much more extensive and flexible, though!
egui_node_graph
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Creating and (partially) running execution graphs, somewhat similar to make?
I want the DAG to be explainable so to handle type safety ( think that's what you're getting at?) in a user friendly way, I've been looking into using this library to draw the DAG interactively, save this to disk, and then I will then consume this in a macro to actually write the final executable.
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Nodium. Rust flow-oriented programming language.
Did you consider to use egui_node_graph ?
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Equivalent of ReactFlow for Rust
I was looking for something similar and found https://github.com/setzer22/egui_node_graph
- Pure Data as a plugin, with a new GUI
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Why do you waste so much time on the internet
Gankra's work on a useful rust memory model is both fascinating and useful: https://twitter.com/Gankra_/status/1509335163045650436
This tool to convert low-complexity rust tests to proofs is interesting and something I'm glad I know exists: https://model-checking.github.io/kani-verifier-blog/2022/05/...
I'm using this code I found out about via reddit in a side project, probably less interesting to you though: https://github.com/setzer22/egui_node_graph
(Warning, videos from here on out):
Cool product demo of a futuristic debugger: https://www.hytradboi.com/2022/debugging-by-querying-a-datab...
These people also have a cool demo of splitting a single program across two different computers (frontend and backend webserver in their case). Maybe a bit less convincing than the previous one, but something I intend to watch: https://www.hytradboi.com/2022/uis-are-streaming-dags
These people have some really cool work on automatically solving physics problems (just linking to one of their talks as an example): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WHhDgxkiR9c
- [Media] A complete overhaul of Blackjack's 3d viewport with custom wgpu drawing
What are some alternatives?
hvcc - The heavy hvcc compiler for Pure Data patches.
Fetcher - A chrome extension which fetches your favourite feeds, so you don't have to.
Camomile - An audio plugin with Pure Data embedded that allows to load and to control patches
pure-data - Pure Data - a free real-time computer music system
scheme-for-pd - Pure Data port of the Scheme For Max external, providing an embedded S7 Scheme/Lisp interpreter for scripting and live-coding Pure Data in Scheme Lisp.
nodium - Nodium is an easy-to-use data analysis and automation platform using Rust with a visual node-based interface. It includes a plugin browser for downloading extensions, making it versatile for a wide range of data manipulation tasks. No coding experience required.
score - ossia score, an interactive sequencer for the intermedia arts
LeechBlockNG - LeechBlock NG (Next Generation) for Firefox is a simple productivity tool designed to block those time-wasting sites that can suck the life out of your working day. All you need to do is specify which sites to block and when to block them.
Cardinal - Virtual modular synthesizer plugin