- jQuery - The de-facto library for the modern age. It makes things like HTML document traversal and manipulation, event handling, animation, and Ajax much simpler with an easy-to-use API that works across a multitude of browsers.
- Backbone - Backbone.js gives structure to web applications by providing models with key-value binding and custom events, collections with a rich API of enumerable functions, views with declarative event handling, and connects it all to your existing API over a RESTful JSON interface.
- AngularJS - Conventions based MVC framework for HTML5 apps.
- Underscore - Underscore is a utility-belt library for JavaScript that provides a lot of the functional programming support that you would expect in Prototype.js (or Ruby), but without extending any of the built-in JavaScript objects.
- lawnchair - Key/value store adapter for indexdb, localStorage
- lxml - Pythonic binding for the C libraries libxml2 and libxslt.
- boto - Python interface to Amazon Web Services
- Django - Django is a high-level Python Web framework that encourages rapid development and clean, pragmatic design.
- Fabric - Library and command-line tool for streamlining the use of SSH for application deployment or systems administration task.
- PyMongo - Tools for working with MongoDB, and is the recommended way to work with MongoDB from Python.
- Celery - Task queue to distribute work across threads or machines.
- pytz - pytz brings the Olson tz database into Python. This library allows accurate and cross platform timezone calculations using Python 2.4 or higher.
- 960 Grid System - An effort to streamline web development workflow by providing commonly used dimensions, based on a width of 960 pixels. There are two variants: 12 and 16 columns, which can be used separately or in tandem.
- Compass - Open source CSS Authoring Framework.
- Bootstrap - Sleek, intuitive, and powerful mobile first front-end framework for faster and easier web development.
- Font Awesome - The iconic font designed for Bootstrap.
- Zurb Foundation - Framework for writing responsive web sites.
- SASS - CSS extension language which allows variables, mixins and rules nesting.
- Skeleton - Boilerplate for responsive, mobile-friendly development.
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//Make sure you scroll down to get all data loaded | |
var text = ''; | |
$('.col-email').each(function(index,el) { | |
if (index == 0) { | |
text = 'Email, First Name, Last Name\n'; | |
} | |
else { | |
text = text + $.trim($(el).find("a").text()) + ','; | |
//First Name |
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#!/usr/bin/env bash | |
function dumpBundle { | |
FILE=$1 | |
OUTDIR=$2 | |
LZMADIR=$3 | |
OUTPATH="$OUTDIR/$FILE" | |
LZMAPATH="$LZMADIR/$FILE" | |
mkdir -p $(dirname "$OUTPATH") |
This is quite a 'classic' problem and the immediate thought ("just do it mySQL") doesn't work here because of the need to have the rails piece that encodes a password that is entered.
So you need to actually use rails, something like this (this should all be happening in your local development environment which is the default when working locally):
You need to create a user.
Try this:
cd the_root_of_the_project
Look at LSB init scripts for more information.
Copy to /etc/init.d
:
# replace "$YOUR_SERVICE_NAME" with your service's name (whenever it's not enough obvious)
You should have some tools installed like Homebrew, a text editor such as Sublime Text and it's subl command line app inside a bin
folder and some basic terminal knowledge.
This gist is a more detailed version of niepi's gist with things that worked for me. It may help someone :)
$ brew install php --with-apache --with-mysql --with-pgsql --with-intl
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AWS_S3_BUCKET= | |
AWS_S3_ACCESS_KEY_ID= | |
AWS_S3_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY= |