Towel
spectre.console
Towel | spectre.console | |
---|---|---|
10 | 24 | |
702 | 8,644 | |
- | 1.4% | |
0.0 | 8.7 | |
4 months ago | 2 days ago | |
C# | C# | |
MIT License | 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.
Towel
-
What your hidden nuget gems ?
Towel - Throw in the towel! data structures, algorithms, mathematics, metadata, extensions, console, and more - https://github.com/ZacharyPatten/Towel
-
More C# Console Games
PacMan is... a PacMan clone in the console. Get the dots. Dodge the ghosts. It's not intended to be very faithful though. I didn't research the AI of the ghost, I just came up with my own AIs that worked. Here is what I did for the ghost AIs: - Ghost a: follows you via Dijkstra Path Finding and updates every 6 frames (faster) - Ghost b: randomly moves and updates every 6 frames (faster) - Ghost c: follows you via Dijkstra Path Finding and updates every 12 frames (slower) - Ghost d: randomly moves and updates every 12 frames (slower) Note: for this game I pulled in a reference to my nuget package Towel because it includes generic versions of the Dijkstra Path Finding algorithm.
-
Best data structures and algorithms packages?
Can you give an example? BCL covers the most common algorithms and data structures, so...? There's also a whole pack of additional algorithms and data structures by u/ZacharyPatten: https://github.com/ZacharyPatten/Towel
-
SLazy<T> (a struct alternative Lazy<T>)
Unit Tests
-
SLazy<T> (a struct alternative to Lazy<T>)
Source Code
-
DSA and time complexities
I have a GitHub project with generic data structures and algorithms here: https://github.com/ZacharyPatten/Towel It has 18 of the common comparison-based sorting algorithms.
-
Mathematics/Scientific computing libraries
I don't know specifically what you are looking for, but I have a project called Towel that has generic vectors. If interested: https://github.com/ZacharyPatten/Towel.
-
What I learned about C# from job interviews
https://github.com/ZacharyPatten/Towel/blob/070d454f3fcdc5c632bf68547911718b324cf6ae/Examples/DataStructures/Program.cs#L247
-
Random Generation (with efficient exclusions)
Notice how algorithm #1Pool Tracking is dependent on the range of possible values while algorithm #2 Roll Tracking is not. This means if you have a relatively large range of values, then algorithm #2 is faster, otherwise algorithm #1 is faster. So if you want the most efficient method, you just need to compare those runtime complexities based on the parameters and select the most appropriate algorithm. Here is what my "Next" overload currently looks like: See Source Code Here
-
How to parse console app arguments and auto create help pages
Here is an example if interested: https://github.com/ZacharyPatten/Towel/blob/master/Examples/CommandLine/Program.cs All I have to do is add the [Command] attribute onto the methods and call "HandleArguments".
spectre.console
-
Harlequin: SQL IDE for Your Terminal
I like this one for .NET https://github.com/spectreconsole/spectre.console which I found in this list https://github.com/shadawck/awesome-cli-frameworks.
-
Gentle introduction for generics (C#)
The following code sample (a console project) uses Spectre.Console NuGet package to provide easy methods for gathering user input like first and last name of type string or perhaps birth date for a DateOnly property.
-
Dotnet.World.News(Wednesday, September, 20, 2023)
🔴 [spectre.console] A .NET library that makes it easier to create beautiful, cross platform, console applications.
-
spectre.console VS FluentConsole.Net - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 3 Jun 2023
- How do you write something without having to use Console.SetCursorPosition or clearing the entire screen?
-
What your hidden nuget gems ?
https://github.com/spectreconsole/spectre.console for doing pretty Cli applications
-
What are you working on? (2023-02)
A friend and me have been working on an opinionated wrapper around the popular Spectre.Console. We call it SpectreCoff (Spectre.Console for F#).
-
SQL-Server: Computed columns with Ef Core
Spectre.Console for enhanced console writting.
-
EF Power Tools tutorial
Add the NuGet package Spectre.Console to the project
-
Console applications in C#
By using open source library like Spectre.Console creating useful console applications easy. Spectre.Console also makes it easy to create dotnet tools, see documentation and check out their GitHub repository.
What are some alternatives?
C# Algorithms - :books: :chart_with_upwards_trend: Plug-and-play class-library project of standard Data Structures and Algorithms in C#
Gui.cs - Cross Platform Terminal UI toolkit for .NET
Algorithmia - Algorithm and data-structure library for .NET 4.5.2+/Netstandard 2.0+. Algorithmia contains sophisticated algorithms and data-structures like graphs, priority queues, command, undo-redo and more.
Command Line Parser - The best C# command line parser that brings standardized *nix getopt style, for .NET. Includes F# support
awesome-software-architecture - A curated list of awesome articles, videos, and other resources to learn and practice about software architecture, patterns, and principles.
Cocona - Micro-framework for .NET console application. Cocona makes it easy and fast to build console applications on .NET.
xaml-math - A collection of .NET libraries for rendering mathematical formulae using the LaTeX typesetting style, for the WPF and Avalonia XAML-based frameworks
Console Framework - Cross-platform toolkit for easy development of TUI applications.
Akade.IndexedSet - A convenient data structure supporting efficient in-memory indexing and querying, including range queries and fuzzy string matching.
command-line-api - Command line parsing, invocation, and rendering of terminal output.
CliFx - Class-first framework for building command-line interfaces