awesome-creative-coding
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awesome-creative-coding | FielDHub | |
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8 | 1 | |
12,162 | 35 | |
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- | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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awesome-creative-coding
- Ask HN: Resources to learn generative art programming?
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Are there any resources to learn generative art?
Awesome Creative Coding
- a question about where to start
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How difficult is it to make such a software?
As far as I can tell from the Twitter thread, he made a few prototypes. These Tweets made me enter a rabbit hole on the topic of creative coding, there are A TON of very cool tools out there. Here is a list: https://github.com/terkelg/awesome-creative-coding. You could use these frameworks to build a data visualization tool from the ground up. There are also many pre-built data visualization frameworks, but I doubt there's one that can visualize data exactly in the way shown in the Tweets. Here are some libraries (special focus on PKMS): https://github.com/terkelg/awesome-creative-coding. This GitHub repo is also an excellent source of other PKMS tools.
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Best coding languages/ editors for creative coding and generative artwork?
This repo on GitHub is a really great starting point: https://github.com/terkelg/awesome-creative-coding
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Fidenza
The source code is visible on-chain - it can be queried from the smart contract, but also it has been etched into the data of the “script upload” transaction. This is how ArtBlocks and other projects can fetch the script and display it. But that doesn’t mean the code is open source! Just like scripts on a website (which are also easy to see), the author decides on how to license the work.
I often suggest GenerativeArtistry as a simple starting point if you already know a bit of JavaScript and want to understand how it works on a basic level[1]. Tyler Hobbs' blog (OP link) also has some great essays on generative art[2], as with the blog of Anders Hoff[3], and also lots of other resources in awesome-creative-coding repo[4].
[1] - https://generativeartistry.com/
[2] - https://tylerxhobbs.com/essays
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