awesome-love2d
processing
awesome-love2d | processing | |
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28 | 456 | |
3,037 | 6,448 | |
1.3% | 0.1% | |
5.6 | 0.0 | |
6 days ago | 5 months ago | |
Java | ||
Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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awesome-love2d
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what should I use to create games in lua? raylib vs love 2d
I tried both and honestly the experience with love is better because it's actually made for lua. There's a vscode extension for love, a ton of lua libraries etc.
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Beginner question: is there any coding standard for documenting Lua functions or tables emulating OOP?
For OOP, look into metatables. I got started with Lua through Love2D and through that I found some OOP modules that are pretty helpful. Here’s a full list of them: https://github.com/love2d-community/awesome-love2d (I’ve been using classic with my projects)
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What are the first game engines/frameworks that come to mind when you hear "code only?"
Such a great Lua gamedev framework! And there's lots of libraries in GitHub. Many collected on awesome-love2d so you don't have to build everything yourself.
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ECS engine in C++ in Lua
love2d is open source and runs on PC and phones. Someone's even ported it to Nintendo3DS/Switch homebrew. nata is the ECS I use, but you can also checkout more libraries on awesome-love2d. I really enjoy using love2d (especially if you enjoy the engine building parts), but one caveat is that major version number bumps will break compatibility. It's usually easy to port and they deprecate functions long in advance. But there's lots of old libraries out there for older versions that won't just work on the latest love2d (like the code for Harvard's CS50 course).
- What are some good libraries for UI and other common needs nowadays?
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Question about game menus and ui
This is example is just the simple version, a state managers can be very powerful, some examples can be found here
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Can one make a Stardew Valley clone with Love2D?
I've used tiny ECS a bit, and I like it a lot. Check out this list
- Love2D vs Solar2D
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How to make apps for mobile?
It depends on what you want to display that will dictate the limitations on how you can adjust to different resolutions. There are probably libraries that can help you with this.
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how would u do this
Once you've done a few tutorials, you can start doing your own thing. Use the LÖVE Wiki (first link) to your advantage. It has the whole love API documented, and you'll probably need to have it open while you work. At this point, you can also look at this GitHub repository for a list of cool libraries that work with LÖVE.
processing
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Our tools shape our selves
reply
I disagree. There are so many creative tools that are now online that you can access from your browser that were not envisioned in the original web. It is obviously true that not EVERY website is about creation (but to expect that seems unreasonable?), but even Wikipedia is a collaborative project.
Examples include products from big vendors like Adobe's Photoshop, to smaller products like SketchUp, to more indy generative art tools like https://processing.org and Strudel (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39924210).
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Let's compile like it's 1992
Would processing[0] be a good fit? It's designed to be easy to use and learn but powerful enough for professional use. Very quick to get cool stuff moving on a screen and the syntax is Java with a streamlined editing environment.
[0] https://processing.org/
- VVVV – A Hybrid Visual/Textual Development Environment
- Random Animations
- Penrose – Penrose
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Program a "Weakest link" for myself IRL game
I would personally use the language Processing. It's the one I use the most. And it's relatively easy to start drawing text, squares, and do other kinds of things. (It's kind of like java, but without all the boilerplate code)
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Turbo Pascal Turns 40
Processing (P5) had this: you can select any string of text in its IDE anl search for it in the docs, and if it's one of the built-in functions or constants it will open the associated static html page that came installed with the software, so no internet nor server required. And despite being offline you can still navigate the docs too. This feels a lost basic skill in static site generation these days.
It was the only creative coding framework that had complete, offline documentation like that at the time I might add. OpenFrameworks is still mostly autogenerated stubs for example.
IMO it was one of the things that gave Processing an edge in educational contexts over all alternatives. I was pretty sad to see p5.js not fully continue that tradition and require that you go online to read the docs, and that it's not a static website but that text is rendered with javascript when you open it (still complete and with examples though).
https://processing.org/
https://p5js.org/
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Ben Fry Resigns from the Processing Foundation
Processing is very cool, especially if you like graphics.
https://processing.org/
Processing is a flexible software sketchbook and a language for learning how to code. Since 2001, Processing has promoted software literacy within the visual arts and visual literacy within technology. There are tens of thousands of students, artists, designers, researchers, and hobbyists who use Processing for learning and prototyping.
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Arduino raises $22M Series B round
And it's not even their IDE. They just slapped some AVR compilers into Processing
https://processing.org/
- Što dati djetetu da uči/radi?
What are some alternatives?
classic - Tiny class module for Lua
OpenFrameworks - openFrameworks is a community-developed cross platform toolkit for creative coding in C++.
awesome-playdate - A list of awesome resources for Playdate (https://play.date) game development and the Playdate SDK (https://play.date/dev/)
manim - A community-maintained Python framework for creating mathematical animations.
helium
Pygame - 🐍🎮 pygame (the library) is a Free and Open Source python programming language library for making multimedia applications like games built on top of the excellent SDL library. C, Python, Native, OpenGL.
Slab - An immediate mode GUI for the Love2D framework.
kaboom.js - 💥 JavaScript game library
love-nuklear - Lightweight immediate mode GUI for LÖVE games
openrndr - OPENRNDR. A Kotlin/JVM library for creative coding, real-time and interactive graphics
awesome-lua - A curated list of quality Lua packages and resources.
love - LÖVE is an awesome 2D game framework for Lua.