Based on our record, Productivity Power Tools seems to be a lot more popular than Pyxel. While we know about 359 links to Productivity Power Tools, we've tracked only 26 mentions of Pyxel. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
Nice work, gives me very Micro Machines vibes for the NES. The only thing I don't like about PICO-8 is that its completely closed source. An open source alternative that seems very promising is Pyxel. It has similar retro / pixel art limitations, a built-in sprite editor, music tracker, etc. https://github.com/kitao/pyxel. - Source: Hacker News / 3 months ago
There's also game engines which are fun to use in python, like pyxel. Source: about 1 year ago
A function to automatically generate an application launch URL has been added to Pyxel, a retro game engine for Python (https://github.com/kitao/pyxel please add your star to this repository!). Source: about 1 year ago
It's fine. You might also enjoy working with Pyxel, which is a little more pixellated and fun and not exactly "classically production ready" either. (I mean, games like Papers, Please could be programmed in Pygame, but that's about it). Source: over 1 year ago
PySDL2(lower level than Love) and Pyxel(more like PICO-8 but scripted with Python). Source: over 1 year ago
Prompt-tower simplifies and speeds-up how prompts with multiple code blocks are written. It's often a pain jumping between files, classes, functions, etc and copying/pasting everything, wrapping and annotating the blocks, and finally sending the prompt off for generation. After seeing filekitty [1], I felt inspired to build my version of the idea... Which is a vscode extension that fits better in a developer's... - Source: Hacker News / about 15 hours ago
Hey HN, we're thrilled to announce the alpha launch of Traycer, our new AI-driven code reviewer that works in the background as you code. During this initial phase, *Traycer is completely free until the end of June and will remain free indefinitely for all open-source projects. You can install Traycer from the VSCode marketplace (https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=Traycer.traycer-vscode). Why... - Source: Hacker News / 4 days ago
For people using make and vscode my plugin is a must have: https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=lfm.vscode-makefile-term&ssr=false#overview It allows you to click above target to run target. - Source: Hacker News / 7 days ago
One of the first things we did when GPT-4 became available was talk to our Azure rep and get access to the OpenAI models that they'd partnered with Microsoft to host in Azure. Now, we have our own private, not-datamined (so they claim, contractually) API endpoint and we use an OpenAI integration in VS Code[1] to connect to, allowing anyone in the company to use it to help them code. I also spun up an internal chat... - Source: Hacker News / 12 days ago
Sure I'd be happy to check it out, my email's in my profile (or Github/website). There are some tradeoffs w/ WebAssembly as well (not sharing the same memory as JS/TS is the biggest one) and debugging can be a bit tough as well though now there's a good VSCode plugin for it [0]. Another part of the reason I also moved back to C++ -> Wasm was for the performance improvement from Wasm vs. JS/TS, but the cross... - Source: Hacker News / 13 days ago
PICO-8 - Lua-based fantasy console for making and playing tiny, computer games and programs.
rubular - A ruby based regular expression editor
TIC-80 - TIC-80 is a fantasy computer where you can make, play and share tiny games.
RegexPlanet Ruby - RegexPlanet offers a free-to-use Regular Expression Test Page to help you check RegEx in Ruby free-of-cost.
LowRes NX - Make your own games in BASIC on the LowRes NX fantasy console
Serendipity - Serendipity is a PHP-powered weblog engine which gives the user an easy way to maintain a blog.