A reminder for all of you that I do indeed program things for a living.
My boss loved the picture. He told me to “show the elf again.”

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A reminder for all of you that I do indeed program things for a living.
My boss loved the picture. He told me to “show the elf again.”
Feburary 23, 2024 • Friday
I revised a little bit of my PyQt notes, hoping to make more progress tomorrow.
I've decided to just look up free courses out of my knowledge base on the internet and read them like encyclopaedias like I used to in my childhood with actual encyclopaedias lol. I love acquiring knowledge.
I unearthed a premade planner that I got as a gift for my 17th birthday, covered in fungus (eek) so I had to fix that. I used it to plan my daily things and its a lot easier to have it on paper rather than trying to remember it all.
Hoping for more productivity tomorrow :)
🎧 So it goes — Taylor Swift
A recent project of mine has been a little RPG game in Unity (more to come on this,) and one of the big parts of developing a game with lots of content like an RPG is dealing with absolutely humungous amounts of ✨Data✨
One such source of spicy, spicy data is Dialogue - I'm a big fan of games like Stardew and Harvest Moon, where talking to NPCs reveals their character, their personality, etc. It's immersion breaking when an NPC start spurting repetitive dialogue, so I've set up a system where there's dialogue that's event driven, conditional and very varied.
But, with so much dialogue, there's a lot to get bogged down by, and I want a nice lil interface I can use to write my dialogue, without writing it directly into a json file.
So - Dialogue Crafter is a little standalone app I'm working on using PyQt in Python, which lets me load up my dialogue data and edit it in (what will eventually be,) a node based format - I can connect dialogue in chains, add choices and branching dialogue, and organise dialogues by character, by season, by purpose, by relationship level with the talker, the list goes on.
Even in it's rough and gnarly state (note the papyrus header) it's been a big help for parsing dialogue and visualising all that data.
A challenge - take a shot every time this post says the word "dialogue"
Python GUI | Build a Beautiful Calculator with PyQt and Qml ☞ http://learnstartup.net/p/_-NZbnT2Y #python #pyqt #qml #programming
PyQt Everything You Need to Know | Python GUI
PyQt is a powerful Python framework for creating cross-platform graphical user interfaces (GUIs). Leveraging the Qt library, it offers a wide array of widgets, layouts, and tools for designing interactive applications with ease. PyQt enables developers to build desktop applications that run seamlessly on Windows, macOS, and Linux, combining Python's simplicity with Qt's robustness for versatile software development. If you want to explore more about PyQt, take a look at this blog.
PyQt is a Graphical User Interface widget toolkit. It is one of the most powerful and popular Python interfaces. It is a combination of the Qt (owned by Nokia) library and Python programming language which leaves a developer to decide whether to create a program by coding or create visual dialogs using Qt Designer. PyQt is a free Python bindings software open-source widget-toolkit Qt, implemented for cross-platform application development framework.
Vista de diseño con designer de pyqt
venta inicial de pqt con designer