![]() Here's how I did it : " Compile openscad image on saveĪutocmd BufWritePost *.scad :silent !openscad -o %:r.png % Of course I knew this was for me, so after installing it on my computer i ran openscad and read the doc but only a few minutes in, i felt the frustration growing inside me : vim has spoiled me, and writing in anything other than vim feels like a physical pain.įortunatelly, vim truely is awesome, and i managed to do exactly what i wanted to mimic from the OpenSCAD IDE : exporting a graphical version of my model as soon as i save the scad file and opening it in feh as soon as I open a. Until a few days ago, where I stumble upon OpenSCAD, which seem to have been created for people just like me : OpenSCAD, as the name implies, is a CAD (Computer-aided design) program, but instead of using your mouse to move 3D objects on an plan, you use your keyboard and code your way out of it. I'm just not the graphical type, and I hate using a mouse on top of that - I don't even own one anymore. One of the woodworker I follow on YouTube, Steve Ramsey, often says he uses Sketchup to plan his projects before going into his shop, so of course I tried it and failed it. The problem? I'm really bad at designing, and it's even worst when 3D is involved. I've been lucky and never really got into trouble by lack of planning, but with the next projects I have in mind, I feel like I need to design a little bit beforehand just to be sure I'm not doing anything stupid. So far I've build two play tables for my kids, a mallet, a stool, and a roman workbench, and all of that with little to no plan. I'm certainly not a fine woodworker but I enjoy spending time in my garage and put a few pieces of wood together and make something out of it. ![]() When I'm not coding, I like to spend time building stuff with my hands - I mean real, physical stuffs.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |