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Can you please email me the images? sean@codeproject.com
Also, for your next article, could I try posting it on your behalf? Might help me figure out what's going wrong.
Thanks,
Sean Ewington
CodeProject
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Sure, Sean! I've noted your request to email the images to sean@codeproject.com. For your next <a href="https://fifaapk.com/fifa-mobile-mod-menu/"></a>FIFA Mobile article, we can discuss the possibility of you posting it on our behalf. Thanks!
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I'm thinking about an article with GoDot Game Engine.
I would use this GitHub project as starting point:
GitHub - thelastflapjack/godot_open_star_fighter: A simple star fighter pilot game intended to be a starting point for the creation of other games.[^]
As shown below I would note this in the article but the main problem would or could be that at the end the foreign code part would be 80 .. 85 % !!
I would plan new features and disable/remove existing code parts but the structure / framework of my game would be almost the same as the template's framework.
Introduction
This article/tip and the demo are about getting started with GoDot Game Engine and using the godot_open_star_fighter game project template as starting point.
Background
There are no CodeProject articles about GoDot Game Engine projects, so I started to create this article.
Using the GoDot Game Engine
Here is a Quick Overview
• First we need the Godot 4 for Windows version as shown in [1] Download Godot 4 for Windows (we use the .Net version)
• Extract and run. Godot is self-contained and does not require installation.
• From GitHub [2] thelastflapjack / godot_open_star_fighter we use this project as template for our project.
• Info taken from [2] – About: A simple star fighter pilot game intended to be a starting point for the creation of other games.
...
Is such an article possible
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Yes as long as you make it clear what your code is based on, and you discuss how your changed code works, that sounds great!
Thanks,
Sean Ewington
CodeProject
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It looks thumbnails for articles on the front pages are broken:
https://www.codeproject.com/?cat=32
Thumbnail for Git – 4 Ways to Ignore Files
https://www.codeproject.com/?cat=1
Thumbnail for Git – SourceTree custom actions for “skip-worktree” option
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Still broken. Try deleting the thumbnail, rename the image, eg: *_v2.*, upload, and reapply.
Graeme
"I fear not the man who has practiced ten thousand kicks one time, but I fear the man that has practiced one kick ten thousand times!" - Bruce Lee
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Should be fixed now.
Thanks,
Sean Ewington
CodeProject
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Hi Mark,
Can you please email me the images? sean@codeproject.com
Thanks,
Sean Ewington
CodeProject
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Currently they are all visible for me. Are they now for you?
If not, please email me the images and I'll make sure it is fixed (sean@codeproject.com).
Thanks,
Sean Ewington
CodeProject
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Yes, it is fixed now. A funny thing, all looked fine in Preview, but later there were problems.
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I attended Machine Learning Conference, so if I write about my general impressions from the conference, without any code, would that be a topic of interest for this site?
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Because of your excellent articles I want to say yes, but unfortunately that's not really within our editorial guidelines for the site.
Thanks,
Sean Ewington
CodeProject
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Why not?
There have been a bunch of "books impressions", opinions about i.e. interviews, how work should be... and other stuff.
This would be a nice diversion, and very probably more qualitative than most of those I have said
Additionally... if he could write it as a blog and import... why shouldn't be able to write directly about it?
M.D.V.
If something has a solution... Why do we have to worry about?. If it has no solution... For what reason do we have to worry about?
Help me to understand what I'm saying, and I'll explain it better to you
Rating helpful answers is nice, but saying thanks can be even nicer.
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Unless Chris was writing it, for as long as I've been here we don't post conference impressions. If I saw a conference impression imported through a blog, I would remove it.
I certainly see the potential value in the content, but it opens the floor to less talented authors impressions of conferences that share no real value, or worse, marketers looking for a free lunch, pointing at existing conference impressions and saying, "this one is allowed, so my self-promotional conference impression must be too."
Thanks,
Sean Ewington
CodeProject
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I understand the point, but then we should clean up a lot of more stuff. As impressions of a book, impressions of what a good interview is...
And there were quite a few that went through.
M.D.V.
If something has a solution... Why do we have to worry about?. If it has no solution... For what reason do we have to worry about?
Help me to understand what I'm saying, and I'll explain it better to you
Rating helpful answers is nice, but saying thanks can be even nicer.
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Book impressions / excepts were allowed and encouraged at one point. It's been years since we've posted one, or since I've been reached out to to post them, though I did see at least one member post one within the last five years. I never did make an official stance about interview articles because the community hated them so much they downvoted them to hell or closed them. I tell any authors that post interview content that they are not going to be well received, and remove them. At some point I'll confer with the team about going back in time and removing these kinds of articles, but it's not an immediate concern.
Thanks,
Sean Ewington
CodeProject
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Either all or none, at least consequent. That was my point.
I didn't realize how long back my memory of those was going, usually I forgot "non critical stuff" very fast
Now that you mention it (and I really thing about it)... yes, it has been a while since the last one I remember.
Point cleared, all good and my apologies for the brain-fog
M.D.V.
If something has a solution... Why do we have to worry about?. If it has no solution... For what reason do we have to worry about?
Help me to understand what I'm saying, and I'll explain it better to you
Rating helpful answers is nice, but saying thanks can be even nicer.
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Dear Colleagues,
Still waiting for approval...
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I can see the other members are really trying to help you and I can see that you're attempting to make changes, but ultimately your changes are small and not enough.
If you please, let's try a different exercise here. For this article only, let's change the goal. The goal is not to get the article published. The goal, for now, is to get better at writing an article for CodeProject. Think of it that way.
Throw your existing article completely out. Start over from scratch. The first step that might be helpful is to make a rule for yourself. Write more words than code. Put it into a word counter if you have to. Write out what the code does, rather than show it.
Also, truly look at the following article by one of our top authors. Don't skim over it, don't skim over this message. Read every word. Think about it. Think about this author's approach in how it differs from your own. CodeProject readers are primarily looking for meaty, exhaustively explained solutions to their development problems, or articles that can teach them something to make their developing faster, more efficient, or expand their repertoire.
Here’s an article from one of our top authors:
HTML5 WebWorkers Experiment[^]
His primary goal is to demonstrate “Using HTML5 WebWorkers and a custom jQuery plug-in to create a Flickr image wall.” He treats the reader like a beginner. He defines jQuery, explains what WebWorkers are, then gets into why he wanted to create a jQuery plugin. Each progressive section of the article expands on his topic, thoroughly explains the code, explains the limitations he chose in his scope, discusses how each element to his plug-in works, provides numerous code examples, and most importantly, gives a source code download at the top for the reader should they need it.
Every time the community considers whether or not to approve an article, this is the style of article they have in mind. They love it, they want it, and they praise the authors enormously when they get it (and we want authors to feel like their hard work is appreciated).
If you can fundamentally change your thinking here, and you can fundamentally change your approach, we're happy to continue working with you. There's no short cut to getting an article published. Put in the time, make the effort. Take a week or longer.
If you come back with minimal changes, that's the end of the road. I don't think you're right for CodeProject. We won't consider any more of your future articles. And that's OK. Some people and institutions don't fit together. But we could. You just have to decide to put in the work.
Thanks,
Sean Ewington
CodeProject
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Just finished tip/trick, please check it
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I appreciate you being willing to start over. But this is essentially tool sharing, which contradicts everything I tried to carefully outline in my previous message. I'm afraid we will be rejecting this tip, and will no longer accept your article submissions on CodeProject.
Thanks,
Sean Ewington
CodeProject
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