Inspired by dannyfritz/commit-message-emoji
See also gitmoji.
Commit type | Emoji |
---|---|
Initial commit | 🎉 :tada: |
Version tag | 🔖 :bookmark: |
New feature | ✨ :sparkles: |
Bugfix | 🐛 :bug: |
[ | |
"United States" => "us", | |
"Afghanistan" => "af", | |
"Albania" => "al", | |
"Algeria" => "dz", | |
"American Samoa" => "as", | |
"Andorra" => "ad", | |
"Angola" => "ad", | |
"Anguilla" => "ai", | |
"Antarctica" => "aq", |
Inspired by dannyfritz/commit-message-emoji
See also gitmoji.
Commit type | Emoji |
---|---|
Initial commit | 🎉 :tada: |
Version tag | 🔖 :bookmark: |
New feature | ✨ :sparkles: |
Bugfix | 🐛 :bug: |
This is a collection of books that I've researched, scanned the TOCs of, and am currently working through. The books are selected based on quality of content, reviews, and reccommendations of various 'best of' lists.
The goal of this collection is to promote mastery of generally applicable programming concepts.
Most topics are covered with Python as the primary language due to its conciseness, which is ideal for learning & practicing new concepts with minimal syntactic boilerplate.
JavaScript & Kotlin are listed in the Tooling
section; as they allow extension of VS Code
and the IntelliJ
suite of IDEs, which cover most development needs.
Free O'Reilly books and convenient script to just download them.
Thanks /u/FallenAege/ and /u/ShPavel/ from this Reddit post
How to use:
download.sh
file and put it into a directory where you want the files to be saved.cd
into the directory and make sure that it has executable permissions (chmod +x download.sh
should do it)./download.sh
and wee there it goes. Also if you do not want all the files, just simply comment the ones you do not want.# how to run this thingy | |
# create a file on your mac called setup.sh | |
# run it from terminal with: sh setup.sh | |
# heavily inspired by https://twitter.com/damcclean | |
# https://github.com/damcclean/dotfiles/blob/master/install.sh | |
#!/bin/bash | |
set -euo pipefail |
#Distributed System Course List
##Systems
Cornell CS 614 - Advanced Course in Computer Systems - Ken Birman teaches this course. The readings cover more distributed systems research than is typical (which I am in favour of!). In fact, there's barely anything on traditional internal OS topics like filesystems or memory management. There's some worthwhile commentary at the bottom of the page.
Princeton COS 518 - Advanced Operating Systems - short and snappy reading list of two papers per topic, covering some interesting stuff like buffering inside the operating system, and L4.