RGBMatrixEmulator
GitExtensions
RGBMatrixEmulator | GitExtensions | |
---|---|---|
3 | 25 | |
77 | 7,522 | |
- | 0.8% | |
7.7 | 9.7 | |
about 1 month ago | 4 days ago | |
Python | C# | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
RGBMatrixEmulator
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Ask HN: Most interesting tech you built for just yourself?
https://github.com/ty-porter/RGBMatrixEmulator
One of the side projects I work on is a scoreboard that displays MLB scores. It's highly configurable -- you buy the size panel you want and a Raspberry Pi, install the software, and you can configure it to display games, standings, and news headlines for your favorite team or division.
The problem is that the hardware is purchased by the end user, so it can come in many different sizes. I think we officially support 6 or 7 sizes right now, and each panel can be a chunk of change if you get a nice one. If we wanted to test on every device that means I need to shell out 50 bucks x 7 sizes, plus Raspberry Pi and wiring adapter, so not insignificant for a hobby project. Instead, I wrote a drop-in replacement emulator that makes it super simple to emulate any size panel across a variety of display types.
The most advanced display adapter spins up a minimal webserver and serves emulated images over a websocket, meaning you can display your panel over the network on pretty much any device with a web browser.
I write about it quite a bit, if further interested: https://blog.ty-porter.dev/categories.html#emulation-ref
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Emulating Raspberry Pi LED Panels
Hi guys, I'm the developer behind RGBMatrixEmulator, a Python library to emulate LED matrices that run on Raspberry Pi via rpi-rgb-led-matrix driver library by Henner Zeller.
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I'm giving out microgrants to open source projects for the third year in a row! Brag about your projects here so I can see them, big or small!
I maintain RGBMatrixEmulator, a Raspberry Pi LED matrix emulator written in Python. It emulates the Python bindings provided by rpi-rgb-led-matrix, the most common LED matrix driver beginners choose when writing code for LED displays.
GitExtensions
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Git Branches: Intuition and Reality
I agree that git is almost asking you to juggle commits.
My preference is to use temporary branches and cherry-picking instead of stashing; I mostly use a gui* to work with git so it is easy to select the two or three commits to cherry-picking or see visually if an interactive rebase would work.
* https://gitextensions.github.io/
- Dear Atlassian, fix that fuckn Sourcetree launch screen
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Git Merge – The Definitive Guide
I use Git Extensions myself as I find the git interface very straight forward, however they still have this fucking insane and frustrating issue: In the mergetool "Theirs" and "Mine" are swapped
- I urgently need help with reverting changes made in Git (complete noob)
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IT Pro Tuesday #251 - Git UI, Fiber Training, Infosec News & More
Git Extensions is a more-intuitive way to manage your Git repositories in Windows. Its standalone interface serves as an effective, CLI-free means to control Git. Preferred by namtab00, because "SourceTree hides and shortcuts too much git functionality."
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Git GUI app that can double click on a branch to check it out?
I presume this is where one goes to make a feature request? https://github.com/gitextensions/gitextensions/issues
- Ask HN: Where are the simple Git GUIs?
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How do you work on the same project when you're in between two PC's in a day?
If you're on Windows, I'd start with installing official Git. It comes with a Git Bash CLI and what not. There are also third party apps like GitExtensions and TortoiseGit if you want more UI/shell integration.
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Learning git as a beginner
Everyone's going to downvote this, but I prefer the GUI over the command-line. I use http://gitextensions.github.io/
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Coolest projects, GO!
https://github.com/gitextensions/gitextensions/releases/tag/v2.51.05 - nice little ui for working with git. unfortunately, v2.51.05 is the last version that I can confirm works under mono (it was the last 2.x version and they completely rewrote the code from scratch in the 3.x series. My understanding was that it lost Linux compatibility at that point).
What are some alternatives?
rpi-rgb-led-matrix - Controlling up to three chains of 64x64, 32x32, 16x32 or similar RGB LED displays using Raspberry Pi GPIO
Bonobo Git Server - Bonobo Git Server for Windows is a web application you can install on your IIS and easily manage and connect to your git repositories. Go to homepage for release and more info.
gentooinstall
LibGit2Sharp - Git + .NET = ❤
space-station-14 - A multiplayer game about paranoia and chaos on a space station. Remake of the cult-classic Space Station 13.
Gitea - Git with a cup of tea! Painless self-hosted all-in-one software development service, including Git hosting, code review, team collaboration, package registry and CI/CD
bevy - A refreshingly simple data-driven game engine built in Rust
GitVersion - From git log to SemVer in no time
sysidentpy - A Python Package For System Identification Using NARMAX Models
tortoisegit - Windows Explorer Extension to Operate Git; Mirror of official repository https://tortoisegit.org/sourcecode
rav1e - The fastest and safest AV1 encoder.
Git Credential Manager for Windows