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@fnky
fnky / ANSI.md
Last active May 23, 2024 19:41
ANSI Escape Codes

ANSI Escape Sequences

Standard escape codes are prefixed with Escape:

  • Ctrl-Key: ^[
  • Octal: \033
  • Unicode: \u001b
  • Hexadecimal: \x1B
  • Decimal: 27
@doctaphred
doctaphred / ntfs-filenames.txt
Last active May 9, 2024 13:27
Invalid characters for Windows filenames
Information from https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/fileio/naming-a-file :
Use any character in the current code page for a name, including Unicode
characters and characters in the extended character set (128–255), except
for the following:
- The following reserved characters:
< (less than)
> (greater than)
@Nilpo
Nilpo / Using Git to Manage a Live Web Site.md
Last active April 26, 2024 19:09
Using Git to Manage a Live Web Site

Using Git to Manage a Live Web Site

Overview

As a freelancer, I build a lot of web sites. That's a lot of code changes to track. Thankfully, a Git-enabled workflow with proper branching makes short work of project tracking. I can easily see development features in branches as well as a snapshot of the sites' production code. A nice addition to that workflow is that ability to use Git to push updates to any of the various sites I work on while committing changes.

Contents

@PurpleBooth
PurpleBooth / README-Template.md
Last active May 22, 2024 13:17
A template to make good README.md

Project Title

One Paragraph of project description goes here

Getting Started

These instructions will get you a copy of the project up and running on your local machine for development and testing purposes. See deployment for notes on how to deploy the project on a live system.

Prerequisites

@jfarmer
jfarmer / 01-truthy-and-falsey-ruby.md
Last active April 16, 2024 03:40
True and False vs. "Truthy" and "Falsey" (or "Falsy") in Ruby, Python, and JavaScript

true and false vs. "truthy" and "falsey" (or "falsy") in Ruby, Python, and JavaScript

Many programming languages, including Ruby, have native boolean (true and false) data types. In Ruby they're called true and false. In Python, for example, they're written as True and False. But oftentimes we want to use a non-boolean value (integers, strings, arrays, etc.) in a boolean context (if statement, &&, ||, etc.).

This outlines how this works in Ruby, with some basic examples from Python and JavaScript, too. The idea is much more general than any of these specific languages, though. It's really a question of how the people designing a programming language wants booleans and conditionals to work.

If you want to use or share this material, please see the license file, below.

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