1. Caret (https://caret.io/) for taking notes. It's a simple Markdown note taker with some really nice features. It outputs plain .md files and works with folder.
2. All my Markdown file are in a folder synced on Dropbox.
3. I use a custom Alfred workflow which uses riggrep to search very quickly through the notes.
One thing to mention is that I want my stack to be private, so this doesn't publish anything to the web but it does sync.
I'm building an online community of rappers, lyricists, and producers to write and share rap songs, collaborate, learn how to freestyle, improve their craft, etc.
Tech + creative tools (natural language processing, lyrical analysis, etc.) + community = best place to get better at making hip hop.
This is a side project for me, but it's been going pretty well recently and I've gotten excited about it. I'm looking for anyone that would like to help.
1. Love the tutorial, super simple and I loved how you introduced harder concepts like linking blocks later on.
2. The objective is clear and challenging right from the get-go, as opposed to introducing levels, the game just naturally kind of gets harder.
3. After introducing the timer that's when I was like "oh shit just got real" and I felt that pressure made it more fun
You think you've done a bunch of things right here. Nice work.
I've been writing Ruby for a few years on a number of production applications.
Recently I've had to pickup Hack for work, and if there's one thing I really like about it is the type hinting. The best part is that it helps you handle nullable types (not sure if it's done here).
When I switch back to Ruby from Hack, I find it harder to reason about my program.