nlsandler / haiku-generator
A command-line haiku generator.
☆14Updated 7 years ago
Related projects: ⓘ
- An ambient noise mixer☆26Updated 7 months ago
- Glitch art generator: guaranteed to create glitched images, "art" not guaranteed☆20Updated 4 years ago
- Astrid for pippi☆10Updated 2 years ago
- Python Bytebeat livecoding software in SDL.☆54Updated 6 years ago
- Hrǽw - A project information and documentation engine☆12Updated 3 years ago
- Reconstructions of optical illusions by Akiyoshi Kitaoka☆13Updated 7 years ago
- Pixel-mangling scripts for the command line.☆29Updated last year
- Create 2D visuals in Python.☆10Updated 6 months ago
- An interactive tool Written in Processing to draw and generate Turmites (Turing Machines on 2D tapes).☆26Updated 6 years ago
- fast wrapper around some pixel manipulation☆26Updated 8 years ago
- ☆17Updated this week
- Boids workshop☆22Updated 4 years ago
- Random fun with statistical language models.☆65Updated 4 years ago
- A city building game for the Anthropocene☆16Updated 5 years ago
- Ærende is a tool to facilitate the recording of reminders, similar to post-it notes.☆18Updated 4 years ago
- Art1 by Richard Williams, 1968☆41Updated 5 months ago
- things that don't deserve their own repo☆63Updated 2 months ago
- Comic generation sandbox☆9Updated 7 years ago
- [unmaintained] helpers used to draw and animate with python (cairo)☆14Updated 8 years ago
- An xsublim clone☆19Updated 5 years ago
- "Translate" a plot from Mark Riedl's WikiPlots corpus into a poem. For NaPoGenMo 2017.☆20Updated 7 years ago
- Create Notebooks with Interactive Figures☆20Updated last month
- Math Projects in Processing☆17Updated 5 years ago
- generating mazes in different shapes☆24Updated 4 years ago
- Generative Grammar Compiler☆19Updated 7 years ago
- Experimental html based terminal emulator using pyte and webkit.☆28Updated 7 years ago
- An assembler for the LC-3 fictitious computer.☆18Updated 3 months ago
- Music For Programmers, a graphical patching language☆56Updated this week
- An encoding of the UK's self-isolation rules in Prolog☆34Updated 3 years ago
- ☆48Updated this week