CorneliusTalmadge
~Only a moron wouldn’t cast his vote for Monty Burns!
No it says right here school bus!
Well there’s nothing scarier then go to school.
In case anyone was scrolling by and is interested the quote is a bit misleading out of context, Marx isn’t saying we should do this, he is more saying that capitalism requires “us” to do this, while telling us if we just stop eating avocado toast we too could become part of the billionaire class. While of course they themselves would never live without these supposed needless things.
Read it in context here Need, Production and Division of Labor, this link is directly to the section the quote is from but in my opinion the formatting isn’t as good.
It sounds like you are looking for more of a pattern designing tool. There are open source projects that might be more suited to this than freeCAD. Try searching online for “open source textile pattern software”
I can’t vouch for this program/project as I am not involved nor have I used it; but Velentina sounds like it is capable of doing what you mentioned.
The sketchers in freeCAD can be used to draw and constrain the patterns, and then print them to scale and cut them out to see how it works.
(Note I have not tried to print to scale from freeCAD specifically but I would imagine it is more then capable of doing so assuming your sketches are smaller then the paper you are printing on)
Of course freeCAD can be used to do the physical modeling but I am unaware of any tools that would specifically assist you for textile pattern designs. The closest tool that I am aware of is the sheet metal workbench.
Hopefully this was helpful.
Someone else might be able to suggest a freeCAD specific solution but this might help get you started.
Well the republicans take over, you will have to pay for all weather data. These apps are just ahead of their time.
Maybe I am wrong or my understanding is oversimplified. But the way I understand it is that when you add a dependency to your cargo.toml file, when you run the build rust is going to cargo and downloading those dependencies you added for you and stores the dependencies with project files.
Then when you rebuild it is checking cargo to see if there is a later version and will update according to how you specified the version in the cargo.toml file.
So you are using cargo. it’s basically just automated, so you don’t have to manually interact with cargo the same way you do with pip.
This page has cheat sheets for a variety of languages. Quickref.me
Didn’t he already do this song? No, that was the trading gap, this is about the budget gap.
It depends on how fancy of a website you are trying to make. But check out something like Hugo or Jekyll. I haven’t used Jekyll personally but have used Hugo. There are plenty of templates to get you started depending the type of content you are planning on putting up.
And the best part is you can host the site for free on GitHub or Gitlab, so the domain name is the only cost.