penpot
Sonic Pi
penpot | Sonic Pi | |
---|---|---|
227 | 112 | |
28,134 | 10,548 | |
7.0% | 0.7% | |
10.0 | 8.8 | |
4 days ago | 11 days ago | |
Clojure | C++ | |
Mozilla Public License 2.0 | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
penpot
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Release Radar · April 2024 Edition: Major updates from the open source community
Imagine designers and coders working seamlessly together. That's what Penpot aims to do. It's a tool where designers can create stunning designs, interactive prototypes, and design systems at scale. Developers then have ready-to-use code, which makes their workflows faster and more efficient. Penpot's latest version receives a new grid CSS layout, new UI, new components system, and more components. Oh and there's now light AND dark mode 🎉.
- Figma OSS Alternative
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Rama is a testament to the power of Clojure
This is how I see things also. Clojure is extremely practical and naturally attracts people that want to ship products.
The "Figma OSS Alternative" post that's also on the HN homepage right now doesn't mention Clojure anywhere (no comments about it either!), but Penpot is clearly also yet another app successfully shipped using Clojure: https://github.com/penpot/penpot
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Penpot 2.0 Released
Really neat. I was mainly curious to know when they are planning to release the self hosted docker versions of Penpot 2.0. Looks like its coming in the next couple days hopefully [1].
[1]: https://github.com/penpot/penpot/issues/4380
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What Design Tool Should I Use?
Website • Getting Started • User Guide • Tutorials & Info • Community • Twitter • Instagram • Mastodon • Youtube
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15 open-source tools to elevate your software design workflow
Link | Free Trial | Github | License
- Ask HN: How would you build Figma?
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Open Source alternatives to tools you Pay for
Penpot - Open Source Alternative to Figma
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CEO of Figma is a Zionist and supports the occupation of Palestine
- Penpot (open source) - penpot.app/
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Just paying Figma $15/month because nothing else fucking works
A colleague had a quick presentation on Penpot[1] a few weeks back. Was a real contender I think.
[1]: https://penpot.app/
Sonic Pi
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Anyone else using ChatGPT to make music?
I have wondered what grooves it could come with using https://sonic-pi.net/
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I Need to Grow Away from These Roots
Something fascinating about seeing a 'score' for generative music written out as a sort of specification like that.
There's enough detail there that you can take those instructions and reimplement your own version of it, and you'll end up with essentially the same 'piece of music', but certainly a different interpretation of it. Because while the score lays out some details precisely, it leaves other choices less clear. What does 'all inversions' really mean when enumerating chords? Does it include open, spread voicings? What durations should we choose from for our random waveforms? How short is 'short' when deciding to repeat? And of course, what wave synths should you use, and how should you modulate them?
All those are similar to the decisions a traditional instrumentalist makes when interpreting a sheet music score for performance - here, a generative music coder can follow this 'score' and produce a program that represents their own interpretation of the piece.
Coding it up in Sonic Pi (https://sonic-pi.net/) was a fun exercise, and I feel like I was able to produce something along the lines of what the composer intended. It carries the same kind of mood that the recording in the video has. But it's my own 'performance' of the work, if that makes sense (even if it's actually Sonic Pi 'performing' it at runtime...)
All of which got me thinking about the relationship more generally between specification, and implementation. Considering different programmers' implementations of algorithms as individual 'performances' of scores from the overall design - and then thinking about developers building elements of a larger system architecture as individual performers working to deliver their part of the performance as part of a band or orchestra. Some groups, maybe they're directed by a conductor-architect; others maybe are improvisers, riffing off one another and occasionally stepping up to deliver a solo. And some are maybe solid session performers, showing up and delivering strong but unflashy performances to a producer's specification.
So overall, a nice meditative coding exercise for a Sunday afternoon, and a shift in perspective. Thanks for sharing it.
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History of the Web - Part 1
On a seriously light-hearted note, Herve Aniglo, talked about teaching children to code with music using Sonic PI, a language agnostic platform that helps you learn recursions, looping, circuit breaking and functional programming by creating simple tunes.
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Genuary 2024: Generative Art / Creative Coding Month
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLPYzvS8A_rTYEba_4SDvR...
- Sonic Pi is built on-top of SuperCollider, but it's MUCH easier to get started with making bleeps and bloops. Sam Aaron, who originally created Overtone (a Clojure front-end for SuperCollider) created Sonic Pi initially to teach kids computer programming and music, but now it's turning into a pretty nice live-coding setup. The language is basically a DSL extension of Ruby, and although it's very elegant, I feel like it's a little nerfed in terms of a full language when compared to SCLang, so I'm sticking with the latter for now. High recommend checking it out if you're new to making music or code. https://sonic-pi.net/
- This 'Intro To Live Coding' vid from Alex McLean is great. Gives a good overview of a few fun tools out there that I won't mention here for sake of time (check out Gibber and Hydra for web-based coding things. Gibber is really slick). Alex invented Tidal Cycles, which I feel is like god-tier in terms of power and conciseness. Maybe I'll tinker with Tidal someday, but I want to start with SC.
- Web FM synthesizer made with HTML5
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Overtone – programmable, live music in Clojure
Strange dice that it seems to mostly be c++, sponsored by 3 prominent elixir shops, with an original OSC server implementation by Joe Armstrong.
https://github.com/sonic-pi-net/sonic-pi/tree/dev/app/server...
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I really got traumatized
There is a programming language+IDE called SonicPI. It's designed to create music by writing code. You can install the program from the lin, then ask chatGPT to generate some sonic PI code that produces some nice melody. Then just copy the code and paste it into the sonicPI program, and run it by clicking the run button. Here's a conversation for example
- Como encontrar tema de tcc em ciência da computação?
- كورس sound engineer
- Annotated demo of basic capabilities of my rototem audio tool
What are some alternatives?
pencil - The Pencil Project's unique mission is to build a free and opensource tool for making diagrams and GUI prototyping that everyone can use.
supercollider - An audio server, programming language, and IDE for sound synthesis and algorithmic composition.
Tkinter-Designer - An easy and fast way to create a Python GUI 🐍
FoxDot - Python driven environment for Live Coding
excalidraw - Virtual whiteboard for sketching hand-drawn like diagrams
soundtouch-android - Android bindings for SoundTouch lib, focused on size optimization and real-time processing.
drawio-desktop - Official electron build of draw.io
overtone - Collaborative Programmable Music
Taiga - Agile project management platform. Built on top of Django and AngularJS
Coltrane - 🎹🎸A music theory library with a command-line interface
Akira - Native Linux App for UI and UX Design built in Vala and GTK
Black candy - A self hosted music streaming server