impulse
gtoolkit
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impulse | gtoolkit | |
---|---|---|
24 | 22 | |
448 | 1,042 | |
2.0% | 2.0% | |
2.5 | 9.6 | |
5 months ago | 2 days ago | |
TypeScript | Smalltalk | |
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.
impulse
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Show HN: I made CSS Pro, a re-imagined Devtools for web design
I you use Tailwind and React, you might like Impulse[1] (disclaimer: I made it and use it almost daily)
Not only does it provide means for visual editing (for Tailwind only), but it also saves all changes to your code.
Free and open source.
[1] https://impulse.dev/
- Launched Supertweak - a visual editor chrome extension for Tailwind websites
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How I launched Impulse.dev
I've been working exclusively on this project for half a year and... I don't really know where it's going. One of the primary goals from the beginning was to make a product I could use for most of my UI work. And oh my God, have I achieved that. Having used Impulse regularly for months (including designing Impulse itself and impulse.dev), I can't imagine going back.
- Show HN: Impulse – React UI editor that edits your code
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What is the best way to notify the React and Tailwind community about the new tool?
You can look at a few demo videos on the website https://impulse.dev/
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Impulse – Impossible Dev Tools for React and Tailwind
Trying to design some elements intuitively, just by setting classes and seeing how it looks; also prototyping. With Impulse, I can just cycle through all possible font-sizes / margins / paddings / shades of a color / you name it. I've designed the whole impulse.dev website with that approach and I don't wanna go back, it's just so much faster and fun even compared to writing code on two monitors with 10 years of experience. :D
- Show HN: Impulse – Impossible Dev Tools for React and Tailwind
gtoolkit
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Explorative Programming
Your ideas sounded very much like a mixup of Common Lisp with SLIME, Smalltalk interactivity and Unison-like storage of code in a database instead of files.
I've tried all of them, I think the closest thing I've seen to what you describe, which I also find very attractive, is the GT Smalltalk environment: https://gtoolkit.com/
Have you tried that? They call this idea "moldable development" as you can "mold" your environment to your needs.
Even though I loved it, I ended up not using it much, mostly because it's a bit too heavy to keep handy for exploration all the time when needed (it takes like 1GB of RAM even when idle!)... as I already can do most of that with emacs, which is much lighter, I just stick with it.
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Smalltalk simplicity and consistency vs. other languages (2022) [video]
> This power that Smalltalk systems have where the code runs in a GUI that is also the editor/debugger/etc has deeply fascinated me recently.
Have you tried emacs?
> And I'd like to actually understand a tool that I'd have to dive into that deeply, and I think I'll never have the time to truly understand all of the VM, the classes, etc.
I've recently tried to do that myself with Smalltalk via the Glamorous Toolkit[1] (a beautiful, modern Smalltalk environment based on Pharo). Because the programming environment itself comes with a Book teaching it, you can basically just read it as a normal digital book, but with the superpower that everything is editable and interactive: you can change the book itself, every code example is runnable and you can inspect the result objects right there, change it, modify the view for it... they say it's "moldable development" because you almost literally mold the environment as you write your code and learn about the platform.
> And I'd like to be able to create applications that run without shipping the entire Smalltalk VM.
That's why even though I really enjoyed SmallTalk, I can't really see it as anything more than a curiosity. I tried using it at least for my own occasional data exploration because it has good visualisation capabilities and super easy to use HTTP client/JSON parser etc., but the system is so heavy (1GB+ of RAM) that I couldn't justify keeping it open all the time like I do with emacs, on the offchance that I might need to use it for some small task.
Anyway, perhaps that's something you might be interested in.
[1] https://gtoolkit.com/
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An OOP modern language that is enjoyable in terms of syntax?
I have been building a drawing and animation system in Pharo (smalltalk) for a few months, using a really neat new UI called glamorous toolkit.
- Ask HN: What perfect software did you discover of recent?
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Pharo 11, the pure object-oriented language and environment is released!
Last time I tried to "hydrate" thousands of SQL rows into objects and both Pharo and the Glamorous Toolkit froze up. Maybe that is to be expected, but I've done that a million times on the JVM without any problems.
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Ask HN: Has anyone fully attempted Bret Victor's vision?
In my opinion the idea is more than direct data manipulation. It is about how we get feedback. In drawing, the medium to draw is the same medium to read. In programming, there is often a mismatch - coding on a text file, running on somewhere else, e.g. terminal, browser, remote server. If you count surrounding activities for programming, like versioning, debugging, metering and profiling, even more system is involved. We are not even touching the myriad of SaaS offering each tackling carve out a little pie out of the programming life cycle.
Back to your question, from my naive understanding, smalltalk seems to be an all in one environment. The Glamorous Toolkit [1] seems to be that environment on steroid. I have no useful experience to share though.
https://gtoolkit.com/
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Emacs Is Not Enough
Wrote a review on it on the website, copypasting:
Glamorous Toolkit[1] promotes the idea of moldable development[2].
There's a talk on it: Tudor Gîrba - Moldable development.[3]
The basic idea is to have multiple views and editors for any piece of data in your system (including code). Kind of interesting, but the toolkit looks and acts more like a fancy computational notebook type of environment, but without explicitly being a computational notebook.
The site on moldable development states its difference with literate programming:
They are similar in that they both promote the use of narratives for depicting systems. However, Literate Programming offers exactly a single narrative, and that narrative is tied to the definition of the code. Through Moldable Development we recognize that we always need multiple narratives, and that those narratives must be able to address any part of the system (not only static code).
And that's a sensible viewpoint. But I still see it as an advanced version of a literate programming, all done within an interactive environment.
The focus of Glamorous Toolkit seems to be on explaining a code base or a certain part of the system via presenting it via a custom tool.
But I am not too convinced with the top-level development model / workflow it assumes for you. I guess it's too narrowly-focused / opinionated.
It's also a custom fork of Pharo, so the question of long-term stability is even more unclear than that of Pharo itself.
I can't say I can compare it to Project Mage in any meaningful way, except it's also a live environment.
[1] https://gtoolkit.com/
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But... what is it?
Wow, that's very interesting, never heard of it before. In the first link and they've mentioned smalltalk and I remember checking out https://gtoolkit.com which I think has some of the ideas from emacs but is implemented in smalltalk. I always wondered if gtoolkit could fundamentally offer something emacs couldn't (at the principal level) but now that you've lebaled them together, I think I know the answer is no
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The First Rule of Microsoft Excel: Don’t Tell Anyone You’re Good at It
prolly a bit outside the mainstream but -> https://gtoolkit.com/
- Glamorous Toolkit: Moldable development environment
What are some alternatives?
BetterJoy - Allows the Nintendo Switch Pro Controller, Joycons and SNES controller to be used with CEMU, Citra, Dolphin, Yuzu and as generic XInput
moose - Multiphysics Object Oriented Simulation Environment
TextToTalk - Chat TTS plugin for Dalamud. Has support for triggers/exclusions, several TTS providers, and more!
quokka - Repository for Quokka.js questions and issues
Lazy - Lazily evaluated (late-binding) definition for Dyalog APL
vim-buffet - IDE-like Vim tabline
lisperanto - Lisperanto is a spatial canvas for programming; Lisperanto is a spatial canvas for knowledge; Lisperanto is a spatial canvas for ideas;
Moose - MOOSE - Platform for software and data analysis.
ODS_OpenExposureData - Open data standards curated by Oasis.
iceberg - Iceberg is the main toolset for handling VCS in Pharo.
halo - An experimental graph-based meta programming language
seaside - The framework for developing sophisticated web applications in Smalltalk.