![]() The auto-splitting worked better than i thought it would, so the preview seemed enough. I ended up removing “edit individual tweets before posting” functionality - seemed unnecessary. The final tool pretty much matches what I first imagined. I think it might be handy for some people. In the end, I think i succeeded, and when I find the time & know a bit more I will extract and clean up that portion with some clear instructions for deploying. One part of the idea is I want an easy to play with twitter framework, where I can just focus on the front end. i <3 named args, and think doc is just a swell idea. And that I lack experience with python debugging. The biggest hiccup was missing that you need. Overall, I find myself liking python, and had a fairly easy time of it. With (very) little knowledge of python, I was able to glue together a working backend - twitter oAuth (thanks mikeknapp) + api, user session(thanks dound). It’s possible I might hit the quota limits, but that would be a good problem to have. It’s dead easy to get started serving up static files, comes with a good tool ( os x) for running your app locally and deploying. So I decided to give it a shot for this project, and I have to say I love it. Last month I was introduced to google app engine, - I didn’t have much to do with the backend work at the time (pretty much copy paste), but I liked what i saw. And that seems to have fixed the problem on android. an android browser crashed :) I’ve disabled preview-on-typing in mobile - that feature didn’t make sense for the screen size. :)īonus points to yui3 - I did 0 testing with mobile, everything worked on ios the first time i tried it. There’s room for improvement, but it doesn’t smell too bad. I think i’ve finally broken through to where recursion feels natural to think about. Pretty pleased with the code to break up the text into tweet sized chunks. yui3 is full of all sorts of wins, so if you’re doing front end app development and haven’t checked it out, you’re doing yourself a disservice. Learnt about the synthetic valueChange event, which is handy when you are watching a textarea. Yui3 was, as always, a pleasure to work with. Overall, I’m pretty happy both with what I learned, and what I put together in 1 weekend and 3 nights of yui3, python, google app engine, twitter api. I was pretty convinced the front end could be pieced together in about a day. Below you find the best alternatives.A few weeks ago I had this idea for a tool which would allow me to easily post multi-tweet tweets on twitter. If you’re looking for more info about Rasterbator like screenshots, reviews and comments you should visit our info page about it. ![]() Print and combine them into huge posters. Wall art from any image The Rasterbator enlarges images to multiple pages. Other interesting Mac alternatives to Rasterbator are Separation Studio (Paid), Vectoraster (Freemium), Mindcad Tiler (Paid) and A Tiling Script With Python Imaging (Free, Open Source). If that doesn’t suit you, our users have ranked 13 alternatives to Rasterbator and five of them are available for Mac so hopefully you can find a suitable replacement. The most popular Mac alternative is pdfposter, which is both free and Open Source. ![]() Rasterbator is not available for Mac but there are some alternatives that runs on macOS with similar functionality.
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