Absolutely fascinating deep-dive into the core data structures the folks at Zed Industries use for their #Zed#editor!
"Currently there are over 20 uses of the SumTree in Zed. [...] The list of files in a project is a SumTree. The information returned by git blame is stored in a SumTree. Messages in the chat channel: SumTree. Diagnostics: SumTree."
I need someone, preferably an agent or editor at a publishing house, to help me ascertain the content value on a finished book thwt is shelved because I cannot objectively discern its content anymore.
https://www.eventbrite.ca/e/the-greg-younging-conversation-virtual-registration-tickets-887795368847 Wed, May 8, 2024 3:45 PM - 5:00 PM EDT “2024 marks the fifth anniversary of the passing of Greg Younging. We are very pleased to host this year's guest Lorena Sekwan Fontaine, Head of Indigenous Studies at the University of Manitoba and cousin to Greg who will be in conversation with SFU Indigenous scholar, Deanna Reder at this year's Conversation. Join us in person or online as Lorena talks about her ongoing work on the new edition of Greg's seminal work The Elements of Indigenous Style.”
If my MagicaCSG modeling posts have attracted your interest in the SDF modeling method, you might like to have a look at Womp, a free online SDF editor (with a "Pro" subscription option).
I've just played with it for a few minutes, and you can export your scene as an OBJ file, complete with textures for recreating the Womp materials in Blender, as you can see in the screenshot.
Following my previous SDF modeling application tip (Womp), I just discovered that Adobe's Project Neo is accessible as a public beta.
Math genius Inigo Quilez, the father of SDF modeling, is working on Project Neo, and it looks promising. We'll have to wait and see what the subscription price will be though. 😏
What's your #editor / #IDE of choice, and why is it so? Do you use that for all tasks and #programming languages, or do you switch between editors depending on what you're working on?
I mostly use #IntelliJ / #Goland for large projects, and #VSCode for simpler ones. But tbh, I find myself increasingly using VS Code even for projects where I'd previously would reach for IntelliJ. And their poor story around language server integrations makes them feel less relevant today than they used to be.