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@alex2006hw
alex2006hw / introrx.md
Last active August 29, 2015 14:20 — forked from staltz/introrx.md

The introduction to Reactive Programming you've been missing

(by @andrestaltz)

So you're curious in learning this new thing called Reactive Programming, particularly its variant comprising of Rx, Bacon.js, RAC, and others.

Learning it is hard, even harder by the lack of good material. When I started, I tried looking for tutorials. I found only a handful of practical guides, but they just scratched the surface and never tackled the challenge of building the whole architecture around it. Library documentations often don't help when you're trying to understand some function. I mean, honestly, look at this:

Rx.Observable.prototype.flatMapLatest(selector, [thisArg])

Projects each element of an observable sequence into a new sequence of observable sequences by incorporating the element's index and then transforms an observable sequence of observable sequences into an observable sequence producing values only from the most recent observable sequence.

tmux shortcuts & cheatsheet

start new:

tmux

start new with session name:

tmux new -s myname
@alex2006hw
alex2006hw / GIF-Screencast-OSX.md
Created November 9, 2015 14:05 — forked from dergachev/GIF-Screencast-OSX.md
OS X Screencast to animated GIF

OS X Screencast to animated GIF

This gist shows how to create a GIF screencast using only free OS X tools: QuickTime, ffmpeg, and gifsicle.

Screencapture GIF

Instructions

To capture the video (filesize: 19MB), using the free "QuickTime Player" application:

@alex2006hw
alex2006hw / haproxy.cfg
Created November 24, 2015 17:26 — forked from sawanoboly/haproxy.cfg
mongos behind haproxy configuration.
global
daemon
user haproxy
group haproxy
log /dev/log daemon info
maxconn 4096
defaults
log global
option dontlognull
@alex2006hw
alex2006hw / gist:7278afe0fac94ad187b964a4cb37e38c
Created February 24, 2017 06:30 — forked from marty-wang/gist:5a71e9d0a6a2c6d6263c
Compile and deploy React Native Android app of Release version to device.
Disclaimer: The instructions are the collective efforts from a few places online.
Nothing here is my original. But I want to put them together in one place to save people from spending the same time as I did.
First off, bundle.
==================
1. cd to the project directory
2. Start the react-native packager if not started
3. Download the bundle to the asset folder:
curl "http://localhost:8081/index.android.bundle?platform=android" -o "android/app/src/main/assets/index.android.bundle"

1. Clone your fork:

git clone git@github.com:YOUR-USERNAME/YOUR-FORKED-REPO.git

2. Add remote from original repository in your forked repository:

cd into/cloned/fork-repo
git remote add upstream git://github.com/ORIGINAL-DEV-USERNAME/REPO-YOU-FORKED-FROM.git
git fetch upstream
@alex2006hw
alex2006hw / 1-react-native-simulator-and-device.md
Created April 25, 2017 04:12 — forked from almost/1-react-native-simulator-and-device.md
Test React Native on the simulator and on a device without editing the code each time!

In the default React Native app scaffolding you have to edit AppDelegate.m to change where it loads the code if you want to test on your device. I use the following snippet to detect if it's being compiled for Debug or Production and for the Simulator or a device. For Production it uses a copy of the code included in the bundle, for Debug on the simualtor it loads from a server on localhost and for Debug on a device it loads from a server on a given IP address.

NOTE: You need to edit YOUR-IP-HERE and change it to the IP to load the code from when in Debug mode on a device. You could use a service like ngrok to make this work from anywhere.

  NSURL *jsCodeLocation;

  // Loading JavaScript code
  #if DEBUG
    // For Debug build load from development server. Start the server from the repository root: