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@touilleMan
touilleMan / SimpleHTTPServerWithUpload.py
Last active May 4, 2024 01:08 — forked from UniIsland/SimpleHTTPServerWithUpload.py
Simple Python Http Server with Upload - Python3 version
#!/usr/bin/env python3
"""Simple HTTP Server With Upload.
This module builds on BaseHTTPServer by implementing the standard GET
and HEAD requests in a fairly straightforward manner.
see: https://gist.github.com/UniIsland/3346170
"""
@francbartoli
francbartoli / demo.py
Created June 2, 2019 12:48 — forked from wshayes/demo.py
[Websocket demo for fastapi] example of broadcast using websockets for fastapi #fastapi #websockets
# From https://github.com/tiangolo/fastapi/issues/258
from typing import List
from fastapi import FastAPI
from starlette.responses import HTMLResponse
from starlette.websockets import WebSocket, WebSocketDisconnect
app = FastAPI()
@wolever
wolever / watchdog.py
Created December 2, 2016 23:57
A simple watchdog for long-running Python processes
"""
A simple watchdog for long running processes which may stall for some reason or
another.
If the main thread hasn't logged progress (by updating
``self.last_progress_time``) in WATCHDOG_HARD_KILL_TIMEOUT, the watchdog
thread will log an error containing the stack trace of all currently running
threads then use ``kill -9`` to kill the main process.
Assumes that a process monitor like supervisor or systemd will then restart
@zenorocha
zenorocha / README.md
Last active April 6, 2024 16:59
A template for Github READMEs (Markdown) + Sublime Snippet

Project Name

TODO: Write a project description

Installation

TODO: Describe the installation process

Usage

@darinwilson
darinwilson / sonic_pi_examples.txt
Last active March 15, 2024 14:59
Sonic Pi Examples
##############################################
## Example 1 - play a note
play 60
##############################################
## Example 2 - play 4 random notes
4.times do
play rrand_i(60, 90)
sleep 0.5
@gaearon
gaearon / minification.md
Last active March 4, 2024 12:45
How to Set Up Minification

In production, it is recommended to minify any JavaScript code that is included with your application. Minification can help your website load several times faster, especially as the size of your JavaScript source code grows.

Here's one way to set it up:

  1. Install Node.js
  2. Run npm init -y in your project folder (don't skip this step!)
  3. Run npm install terser

Now, to minify a file called like_button.js, run in the terminal:

@alexisrobert
alexisrobert / webserver.go
Created May 20, 2011 10:13
Tiny web server in Go for sharing a folder
/* Tiny web server in Golang for sharing a folder
Copyright (c) 2010-2014 Alexis ROBERT <alexis.robert@gmail.com>
Contains some code from Golang's http.ServeFile method, and
uses lighttpd's directory listing HTML template. */
package main
import "net/http"
import "net/url"
@mgoellnitz
mgoellnitz / snip.sh
Last active January 4, 2024 17:57
GitLab Snippet Command Line Tool
#!/bin/bash
#
# Copyright 2016-2021 Martin Goellnitz
#
# This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
# the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
# (at your option) any later version.
#
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
@xavriley
xavriley / README.md
Last active December 30, 2023 12:17
Original NES Mario Theme for Sonic Pi

Making Chiptune Music using Sonic Pi v2.0

Warning: this might not work on a RaspberryPi yet

I was curious about making retro gaming sounds using Sonic Pi. A couple of months and a lot of Googling later, here's the original Mario Bros theme as it was heard on the NES console.

I'm (just about) old enough to remember rushing home from school to play this game at Philip Boucher's house, sitting cross-legged in front of the TV till my feet got pins and needles. Working out how to recreate it for Sonic Pi was a lot of fun!

Getting the sounds of the NES chip

@ForgottenUmbrella
ForgottenUmbrella / publish_python.md
Last active December 25, 2023 21:49
How to publish Python apps for human beings

How to publish Python apps for human beings

So, you've created a Python app (be it a graphical user interface with Qt or the like, or a simple command line interface). Great! But how are others going to use it? Python applications often have dependencies (e.g. from third-party modules), and they also need a Python interpreter to run them. For a developer, installing all the necessary bits and bobs to make things work is okay, but that's unacceptable for a normal user - they just want to download the thing and run it.

Below are simple instructions to publish your app on the three main operating systems: Windows, macOS and Linux.