I have moved this over to the Tech Interview Cheat Sheet Repo and has been expanded and even has code challenges you can run and practice against!
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CloudFlare is an awesome reverse cache proxy and CDN that provides DNS, free HTTPS (TLS) support, best-in-class performance settings (gzip, SDCH, HTTP/2, sane Cache-Control
and E-Tag
headers, etc.), minification, etc.
- Make sure you have registered a domain name.
- Sign up for CloudFlare and create an account for your domain.
- In your domain registrar's admin panel, point the nameservers to CloudFlare's (refer to this awesome list of links for instructions for various registrars).
- From the CloudFlare settings for that domain, enable HTTPS/SSL and set up a Page Rule to force HTTPS redirects. (If you want to get fancy, you can also enable automatic minification for text-based assets [HTML/CSS/JS/SVG/etc.], which is a pretty cool feature if you don't want already have a build step for minification.)
- If you
Fallout 1 was originally designed to run at 640x480 resolution. I wanted to run the Mac OS X version of Fallout on my MacBook 11", which has a 1366x768 display. There is a [high resolution patch][hi-res], but it only supports the Windows version of Fallout.
Turns out that the OS X version of Fallout runs through Wine, so we can get this patch working with just a few configuration changes:
Note for Fallout 2 users: The process for Fallout 2 is essentially the same, with a different patch, and some minor pathing differences. Other than that, the process is exactly the same!
#!/bin/sh | |
### | |
# SOME COMMANDS WILL NOT WORK ON macOS (Sierra or newer) | |
# For Sierra or newer, see https://github.com/mathiasbynens/dotfiles/blob/master/.macos | |
### | |
# Alot of these configs have been taken from the various places | |
# on the web, most from here | |
# https://github.com/mathiasbynens/dotfiles/blob/5b3c8418ed42d93af2e647dc9d122f25cc034871/.osx |
⚠️ Note 2023-01-21
Some things have changed since I originally wrote this in 2016. I have updated a few minor details, and the advice is still broadly the same, but there are some new Cloudflare features you can (and should) take advantage of. In particular, pay attention to Trevor Stevens' comment here from 22 January 2022, and Matt Stenson's useful caching advice. In addition, Backblaze, with whom Cloudflare are a Bandwidth Alliance partner, have published their own guide detailing how to use Cloudflare's Web Workers to cache content from B2 private buckets. That is worth reading,
################### | |
# compiled source # | |
################### | |
*.com | |
*.class | |
*.dll | |
*.exe | |
*.pdb | |
*.dll.config | |
*.cache |
import java.io.FileDescriptor; | |
import java.io.FileOutputStream; | |
import java.io.IOException; | |
import java.io.OutputStream; | |
import java.io.PrintStream; | |
public class HelloWorld{ | |
private static HelloWorld instance; | |
public static void main(String[] args){ | |
instantiateHelloWorldMainClassAndRun(); |
- Related Setup: https://gist.github.com/hofmannsven/6814278
- Related Pro Tips: https://ochronus.com/git-tips-from-the-trenches/
- Interactive Beginners Tutorial: http://try.github.io/
- Git Cheatsheet by GitHub: https://services.github.com/on-demand/downloads/github-git-cheat-sheet/
Press minus + shift + s
and return
to chop/fold long lines!
using System; | |
using System.Threading; | |
static class Program { | |
static void Main() { | |
Console.Write("Performing some task... "); | |
using (var progress = new ProgressBar()) { | |
for (int i = 0; i <= 100; i++) { | |
progress.Report((double) i / 100); |