I've been looking for a solution to this problem for a long time. Maybe someone has a tip for me. The Problem is also mentioned in the official adobe help, but without a solution.
Adobe Help writes:
"When you distribute layers of different sizes, the spaces between layers may not be uniform. For example, distributing layers by their centers creates equal space between the centers—but different-sized layers extend by different amounts into the space between layers."
Here is a graphic that shows what I want to have in AE. The first and last elements are only half visible.
Atm i do that in sketch (Distribute Layers horizontally), import it in illustrator and pick the x-values and enter it manual in AE. Thats insane, maybe there is better solution ;-)
I am working on a chemical oligomerization reaction network and have generated a Cytoscape network showing each molecular species and intermediate ions in each node and each connecting edge represents a reaction pathway. The issue is, in this system most reactions are reversible and thus two edges are generated between two nodes and there is no reasonable way to edit my network simulation outputs to remove the reverse reactions. Is there a way I can delete the double edges between two nodes without having to do it manually? An example image of a small section of my network showing the issue
Is this for the Cytoscape desktop or cytoscape.js? For Cytoscape desktop, you can collapse multiple edges using the Edit->Remove duplicate edges...
-- scooter
I am new to SceneKit, and I am trying to move nodes around the scene. How do I align a node to the node adjacent to it by making it 'snap into place'?
This is what it currently looks like when moving a node, it does not show ANY guide:
I do not want to manually change the values, as sometimes it shows multiple, as well as this being inconvenient and slow:
I can see there is an ability to make the node align (I assume using the keyboard or in some settings?) as seen on the WWDC 2015 Enhancements to SceneKit at 6m 20s.
Notice - it 'snaps' into place next to the other wooden box:
How am I able to achieve this? What other keyboard shortcuts/settings do I need to know? (I only know about the ⌥ (option) key which duplicates nodes)
Did Apple use some 3rd-party app?
If you have any questions, please ask!
Snapping is enabled by holding the command key (⌘) while dragging the object.
I have a graph with 2000+ Nodes.
Using Neo4J Browser, I can display them "outside of the screen" and drag the viewport to navigate through the Graph, but I do not seem to be able to Zoom Out enough to display my whole graph on the same screen.
Reaching a certain point, the zoom out icon grays out, and one cannot get any further.
I read the Developer Manual / Reference but I did not come across sufficient information regarding this.
Any help/information is appreciated.
imho, the neo4j browser is an admin console. For custom viz needs, you should build a custom viz (lots of existing js libs)
The number of displayed nodes is limited to 300 by default in the browser. Might help to increase it (see the Gear tab then Graph Visualization/Initial Node Display)
I've been trying different tiling WM's to see which one best fits my needs. Every time I try a new one, it looks good but I find other things that don't quite work the way I like. My requirements have evolved as I go. Initially, I didn't want to get into Awesome because having to learn Lua is not on my wish list but maybe I should give it a try IF it can do what I want better than the other tiling WM's out there.
I'm going to as specific as I can about what I want. I am running a 3440x1440 monitor. I want to use as much vertical space as possible (meaning, a full width, persistent but mostly empty status bar is not an option, but I do like the notification area and a date/time).
I understand it may not do everything exactly the way I want, which is oke. If it does more or less most of what I want I can weigh my options between Awesome and other tiling WM's (actually, only i3 which is what I'm using now but I'm open to better suggestions). I would very much appreciate it if people don't just say no to something it can't do, but say "no, but it can do ...". In other words, feel free to suggest alternatives that might be helpful as well.
Divide the screen in 3 columns, initially 30/45/25, with the right column split horizontally; Fully adjustable and resizable as needed during my work session;
Persistent layout; when closing the last application in a tile, I don't want that tile to disappear and the remaining tiles to resize. Just show an empty space and leave all tiles as they are.
tabbed tiles, so I see which applications are running in a tile (similar to i3).
Resizable tiles with the keyboard into 1 direction; When making the middle column/tile wider, I want that into a specific direction into another tile and leave the other side alone.
Certain applications I want to always launch into a specific tile. For instance, terminals always go into the right-most column top/bottom, browser/spotify always into the middle, atom/IDE always into the left. Some applications should always be floating. Obviously I want to be able to send them to a different tile after launch.
I don't want a 100% width status bar. It will be mostly empty which is a waste of screen estate. Preferably, I'd like a statusbar part of a tile, for example in the right-most tile, resizing with it. Otherwise I'd like it to be fixed to 30% and allow tiles which are not beneath it to use the full height of the screen. My reason for a statusbar is mute; I actually only want a notification area and a date time permanently visible. I don't need a "start menu", dmenu or similar is perfect, which I believe it has integrated.
Many thanks in advance!
The general answer is "Awesome configuration is code and it can do whatever you want". But there is a catch. Can Awesome be configured like you describe? Yes, totally. There is at least 2 distributions coming close enough (mine[1] and worron[2]) (at least for the tiling workflow, not the look).
The "catch" is that the workflow you describe isn't really the "Awesome way". Awesome is usually used as an automatic tiler. You have layouts that describe a workflow (code, web, internet) and manage the clients according to their programming. Manual tile management is rarely necessary once you have proper layouts. That doesn't mean you can't, I did, but it might be worth thinking outside the box and see if you can automate your workflow a bit further.
Also, the default layout system isn't very modern and makes it hard to implement the features you requested. My layout system (see link below) can be used as a module or as a branch and supports all features described above. Awesome is extremely configurable and it's components can be replaced by modules.
https://github.com/awesomeWM/awesome/pull/644
The layout "serialization" documentation is here:
https://elv13.github.io/libraries/awful.layout.html#awful.layout.suit.dynamic.manual
It is similar to i3 but has more layouts and containers. As for the "leaving blank space" part, it is configured using the fill_strategy:
https://awesomewm.org/doc/api/classes/wibox.layout.ratio.html#wibox.layout.ratio.inner_fill_strategy
As a word of conclusion, I would note that what you ask is "work exactly like i3". If you want such thing, well, use i3. Awesome is a window manager framework. Its goal and purpose is to create a customized desktop shell / WM. If it's what you want, then go ahead and learn it, nothing else can come close to the possibility and the level of control you can get out of it. However it takes time and effort to get to the point where you have "your own perfect desktop". Our users perfect desktops:
https://github.com/awesomeWM/awesome/issues/1395
[1] https://gfycat.com/SmallTerribleAdamsstaghornedbeetle
[2] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-yNALqST1-Y
The WM your are looking for is herbstluftwm (hlwm). Its a manual tiling window manager. The tiles which you are talking about are called frames in hlwm. Each frame can contain multiple windows. A frame can also be empty. Only if you kill a frame the other frames will automatically resize. You can add new frames vertically and horizontally and resize them. Each frame can also have a different layout to organize the windows inside. The layout you are looking for is max. This will stack the windows inside a frame on each other. It doesn't show you tabs like i3 however. hlwm allows you to create rules to open certain applications always in certain frames and workspaces. hlwm doesn't have a statusbar buildin. I personally like to use tint2. It can be used as a replacement for your requirement to see running applications as tabs.