In November, I released Inferno: an open-source collection of Metal shaders for SwiftUI developers, making it easy to create gorgeous special effects in your iOS apps. https://github.com/twostraws/Inferno
GitHub - twostraws/Inferno: Metal shaders for SwiftUI.

Metal shaders for SwiftUI. Contribute to twostraws/Inferno development by creating an account on GitHub.

GitHub
Two months later, I released Vortex: a high-performance particle effect system for SwiftUI, so you can bring effects such as confetti, fireworks, fire, and more into your apps. https://github.com/twostraws/Vortex
GitHub - twostraws/Vortex: High-performance particle effects for SwiftUI.

High-performance particle effects for SwiftUI. Contribute to twostraws/Vortex development by creating an account on GitHub.

GitHub
Today, another two months later, I just released my third and final open-source project, at least for now. It's called Ignite, and it's a Swift static website generator. Your entire site is written as Swift code, then compiled to HTML, JavaScript, and CSS. https://github.com/twostraws/Ignite
GitHub - twostraws/Ignite: A static site generator for Swift developers.

A static site generator for Swift developers. Contribute to twostraws/Ignite development by creating an account on GitHub.

GitHub
@twostraws this looks really cool. I'll dig into it later. Sleep time. But can it be used to generate static sites dynamically? I mean with loops and access to data from my own app and have it generate the static html pages from that?
@tapforms It's Swift code that runs on your Mac when you build the site. It already has support for loops and conditions to generate HTML based on various conditions of your choosing, but you can of course extend that further.