I have been a huge fan of Jupyter for a while now, and most importantly of the flexibility it is offering: I strongly believe that the fact that you only need a screen and network connection to get access to pretty much unlimited computational resources has enormous potential.
TIP: Using Drafts as a Text Snippet Library - Tips & Tricks - Drafts Community
In this article, we are going to step through the setup of a series of tools that allow you to use Drafts as a repository of reusable text snippets. Whether it’s canned responses you use in email or fun emoticons for social media, Drafts can be a great place to maintain and access text snippets. In the process, we’ll touch on how to use a number of Drafts’ features together to create complete workflows. Even if you are not sure you need a snippet repository, you might pick up a few things about...
The File System Access API with Origin Private File System
WebKit supports new API that makes it possible for web apps to create, open, read, and write files directly, or create directories and enumerate their contents.
118: “What’s new in SwiftUI in iOS 16?”, with special guest Natalia Panferova | Swift by Sundell
Natalia Panferova joins John to discuss some of the key new features that are coming to SwiftUI and UIKit in iOS 16, and to talk about her experience working on SwiftUI at Apple.
Lessons from Developing an App on the iPad in Swift Playgrounds from Start to Finish (Including Publishing on the App Store) — 🐙 Cephalopod Studio
I didn’t know entirely what I was getting myself into by making an app on the iPad. I went in aware of its limitations and tried to think of a little something I could make for myself that would be useful and extremely simple. Thus I settled on the love song of so many developers, the thing that
Swift Package Indexing - Episode 8–Swift Package Index Blog
We just wrapped up another episode of Swift Package Indexing with the usual mix of news, Swift Package Index progress, and other interesting bits from the last couple of weeks.
If you’d like to know more about the ins and outs of iOS/macOS development, you can find me on Twitter.
.image img { display: block; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; border-radius: 12px; } .image-caption { font-style: normal; display: inherit; text-align: center; font-size: 90%; color: #565656; } video { display: block; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; width: 80%; border-radius: 12px; } I’ve compiled a list of dev tips that I feel every iOS developer should know.
Spent the last hour creating a very minimal desktop app for Write.as / Musing... — Micro Matt
earliest thoughts today were about my digital work environment, and how it’s basically just the browser, and how distracting that is as someone who always has 50-plus tabs open at any given moment. I think it’d be much nicer to, in the morning, click an icon on my desktop that opens my digital “office.” It’d only show me exactly what I need to work. And at the end of...
When I spitballed [a lexicon for Stage Manager][], I hadn’t yet actually played with the feature. One would think not having actually used a feature would prevent someone from giving feedback…
Reverse chronological home timeline in the Twitter API v2 - Announcements - Twitter Developers
Today, we are launching reverse chronological home timeline to the Twitter API v2 to enable you to retrieve the most recent Tweets and Retweets posted by the authenticated user and the accounts they follow. We know this functionality is important to numerous developer use-cases and we will continue to prioritize innovation and functionality that allows you to build with the core elements of the Twitter experience. “The 1.1 home_timeline API is one of our most used API calls. The increased rate ...
Logger Is the Missing Console for Shortcuts Power Users
Indie developer Alex Hay has long pushed the boundaries of what third-party developers can build with the SiriKit framework and Shortcuts integrations on Apple platforms. In late 2019, his Toolbox Pro app redefined what it means to complement Apple’s Shortcuts app with additional actions, creating an entirely new sub-genre of headless utilities designed to provide
I purchased an iPad Pro with the Smart Keyboard and Pencil to use it as my main computer. Can it replace my local workstation? Is it powerful enough for my day-to-day tasks? Let's find out.