Here's a screenshot from the App Store:
(I edited this image size and resolution)
I would pay a subscription price to get more frequent updates.
Welcome!
This is the community forum for my apps Pythonista and Editorial.
For individual support questions, you can also send an email. If you have a very short question or just want to say hello — I'm @olemoritz on Twitter.
Here's a screenshot from the App Store:
(I edited this image size and resolution)
I would pay a subscription price to get more frequent updates.
Just wondering what is the status of Pythonista development ?
I've been around this forum for about 4 years -- I notice the app hasn't been updated since Feb 2020.
I'm guessing there will be no further development.
Thanks,
Karl
https://www.mathpax.com/
Edit attempt on September 20 2020 -- added link -- added bold font initials
Link to my PDF showing my Timed Automation Shortcut Using Pythonista (TASUP).
Page 4 in the PDF shows the failure notice.
As Mikael states, the manual use of my shortcut did work; the problem is with timed automation.
I’ve completed my new app for iPhone and iPad.
Thanks to all.
Here is the code gist:
khoitsma/augmented_slider.py
https://gist.github.com/khoitsma/3bd07918e41ad6384359432c1c9f199e
http://khoitsmahq.firstcloudit.com/images%2Fslider screenshot.jpeg
https://www.mathpax.com/whats-on-the-pythonista-menu-yep-sliders/
I built an app and am running this app on my iPad.
Credit to:
The video shows an app with 8 inputs — 2 integer, 4 float, 2 boolean. Numeric input is tedious — at best; slider input is easier and offers positive feedback. In this app, both approaches are used:
Efficient sliders for user input
Only clear text for user screenshots
I enhanced the slider class to allow min values, floats, rounded floats, booleans. Rounded floats allow only multiples of say 0.5 [0.0, 0.5, 1.0, 1.5 ... ] or of 5 [0, 5, 10, 15 ...].
Using Overlays
My first post to the forum.
Using the Overlay class successfully — added the decorator to the attach function as was mentioned.
@on_main_thread
def attach(self):
self.parent.addSubview_(self)
In my demo file, I have a main image overlay (resizable) and two auxilary image overlays (resizable). Each of the overlays could have any kind of UI elements; just showing images for proof of concept.
I have found that, for each overlay, the following statements must be in the order shown or else the overlay window will not resize.
ooo=Overlay(name='abc', content=vvv, parent=AppWindows.root())
ooo.content_view.border_width=2
vvv.content_mode=ui.CONTENT_SCALE_ASPECT_FIT
Here is my demo file; provide your own PNG files (foo.png and fooe.png).
from overlay import Overlay, AppWindows
from gestures import Gestures
import ui
if __name__=='__main__':
iv0=ui.ImageView(frame=(0,0,300,300))
iv0.image=ui.Image.named('test:Peppers')
iv0.name='OMAIN▪️'
iv1=ui.ImageView(frame=(0,0,200,200))
iv1.image=ui.Image.named('foo.png')
iv1.name='ICR▪️'
iv1.alpha=1
overlay1=Overlay(content=iv1,parent=AppWindows.root())
overlay1.content_view.border_width=2
iv1.border_width=1
iv1.content_mode=ui.CONTENT_SCALE_ASPECT_FIT
iv2=ui.ImageView(frame=(0,0,200,200))
iv2.image=ui.Image.named('fooe.png')
iv2.name='E▪️'
iv2.alpha=1
overlay2=Overlay(content=iv2,parent=AppWindows.root())
overlay2.content_view.border_width=2
iv2.border_width=1
iv2.content_mode=ui.CONTENT_SCALE_ASPECT_FIT
omain=Overlay(name='abc', content=iv0, parent=AppWindows.root())
omain.content_view.border_width=2
iv0.border_width=1
iv0.content_mode=ui.CONTENT_SCALE_ASPECT_FIT