A Decade of Magnum
On 19th December 2010, Magnum saw its first commit. A bunch more commits happened since then and I learned some things along the way.
On 19th December 2010, Magnum saw its first commit. A bunch more commits happened since then and I learned some things along the way.
During the past four months, Magnum began its adventure into the Python world. Not just with some autogenerated bindings and not just with some autogenerated Sphinx docs — that simply wouldn’t be Magnum enough. Brace yourselves, this article will show you everything.
The new version puts a focus on usability with tweakable constants for live coding, Dear ImGui integration, new packages, Gradle-less Android development, compile time speedup and other general polishing.
Whether you are browsing Magnum docs or use Doxygen for your own C++ documentation, there’s always a way to improve your workflow. This article presents the most recent additions to the m.css Doxygen theme.
Magnum docs were missing the search functionality for some time because I wanted to implement it properly for the new theme. The proper implementation is now ready.
The new website does a better job at clearly presenting engine features and enables the team to share progress easier than before. Besides that, its development resulted in many valuable byproducts for both C++ developers and web content publishers.