openrndr
website
openrndr | website | |
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16 | 22 | |
818 | 4,266 | |
0.1% | 0.7% | |
9.3 | 10.0 | |
3 days ago | 7 days ago | |
Kotlin | HTML | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 |
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.
openrndr
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Show HN: SalamiVG, an SVG framework for generative art and creative coding
I've been having fun making generative art for a few years and recently got the itch to write my own JS library for sketching SVGs.
This library is heavily inspired by OPENRNDR [1], which to date has been my framework of choice.
My motivation to write a JS library for SVGs came from a desire to bring the programming style I love from OPENRNDR into a language I use every day. I was also motivated to generate simple SVGs that I understood deeply because I'd like to start using a plotter soon to bring these sketches into the physical world.
The library is pretty bare-bones, but I did my best to document it thoroughly enough that a beginner could install it and draw their first sketch in as little time as possible. All the documentation, including an FAQ, is hosted in the project Wiki [2]. And yes, I do recommend p5.js for most users/beginners, but I still believe this library fills a niche.
Happy to answer any questions, or field any criticisms/notes.
[1] https://openrndr.org/
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live
I am primarily using the openrndr framework to do all of this.
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Mastodon Bot for Retro-Style Space Images
Last year I wrote Kosmik, a Twitter bot for pixelized retro-style space images in Scala, but I was dissatisfied for several reasons, performance being one, so I migrated the code to Kotlin using openrndr as graphics API recently, and moved the bot to Mastodon. What do you think?
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Framework for creative coding in Lisp?
Is there a framework, library or package along the lines of Processing or OPENRNDR for Common-Lisp or Clojure etc.?
- Openrndr: Open-source framework for creative coding, written in Kotlin
- Openrndr: A Kotlin Based Creative Coding Framework
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Ask HN: What's the best “higher level Rust” these days?
I’d also be interested in peoples replies. I know there is a creative coding framework built on it (haven’t used it though) https://openrndr.org/ .
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Are there more elegant languages for generative art and creative coding?
Kotlin is very similar to Swift. OpenRNDR is a coding framework written it it. Kotlin has many of the features you speak of. Kotlin supports many of the features you ask about (or at least something similar to it).
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Coracle - Kotlin based Processing clone
Also have you checked out https://openrndr.org/
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Processing vs C++ vs Rust for creative coding
After trying to use Processing with Kotlin I discovered OPENRNDR. This is a new-ish creative coding framework created in Kotlin and it runs on the JVM. I'd say the performance is somewhere around what's typical of Processing (so pretty good), it also supports shader programming if you want to squeeze more out of it.
website
- Access to K8 documentation versions earlier than 1.23
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Yet another Kubernetes meme (YAKM)
This happened few years ago I don't remember the specifics, but I find funny to see the exact confusion still around whats supposed to be a basic functionality here with the k8 devs themselves acknowledging lack of correct docs but doing little.
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Kubernetes Turkish Docs
Great to know! Since the kubernetes/website repo currently lacks the tr localisation, I'm pretty sure starting it there would be much appreciated by the relevant community. This guide and the #sig-docs-localizations channel in Kubernetes Slack are the best starting points for those who might be interested in it.
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Kubernetes 1.27 will be out next week! - Learn what's new and what's deprecated - Group volume snapshots - Pod resource updates - kubectl subcommands … And more!
From the doc:
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alternative to kubectl explain?
Better is probably subjective, but you have options. You can run the doc website locally (https://github.com/kubernetes/website) or search the API definitions directly (https://github.com/kubernetes/api). Good ol `git grep` I suppose.
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Free Katacoda Kubernetes Tutorials Are Shutting Down
No, I don't think so. Killercoda is one of the main options currently being considered for moving from Katacoda. You can find this discussion here.
- After 8 years, Kubernetes sort-of documents config file
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How can I become an Open Source contributor? (The ultimate guide)
Kubernetes*
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[Question] How does the failureThreshold work in liveness & readiness probes? Does it have to be consecutive failures?
I'm unable to find any references other than this link that confirms that the failure has to be consecutive. https://github.com/kubernetes/website/issues/37414
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Understanding Kubernetes Limits and Requests
Discover the full power of this feature in the docs.
What are some alternatives?
processing - Source code for the Processing Core and Development Environment (PDE)
top-tic-tac-toe-js - A tic-tac-toe game written in JavaScript that you can play in your browser.
Vulkan - Examples and demos for the new Vulkan API
community - Kubernetes community content
imgui - Bloat-free Immediate Mode Graphical User interface for JVM with minimal dependencies (rewrite of dear imgui)
opensnitch - OpenSnitch is a GNU/Linux interactive application firewall inspired by Little Snitch.
three.kt - Three.js port for the JVM (desktop)
sriov-network-device-plugin - SRIOV network device plugin for Kubernetes
kotlin-unsigned - unsigned support for Kotlin via boxed types and unsigned operators
LeetCode - This is my LeetCode solutions for all 2000+ problems, mainly written in C++ or Python.
JOGL2D - Zero-overhead 2D rendering library for JOGL using Kotlin
glossary - The CNCF Cloud Native Glossary Project aims to define cloud native concepts in clear and simple language, making them accessible to anyone — whether they have a technical background or not (https://glossary.cncf.io).