I am trying to connect to my WEP network just using the command-line (Linux).
I run:
sudo iwconfig wlan0 mode Managed essid 'my_network' key 'xx:xx:... hex key, 26 digits'
Then I try to obtain an IP with
Find.find('vendor/extensions/shop').each {|f| puts ("html2haml, #{f}, #{f.slice(0...-3)+"haml"}") if f =~ /.*\.erb/} |
# Simple turn it off | |
ActiveSupport::Deprecation.silenced = true | |
# Or add custom handler | |
# ActiveSupport::Deprecation.behavior = Proc.new { |msg, stack| MyLogger.warn(msg) } |
# === EDITOR === | |
Pry.editor = 'vim' | |
# == Pry-Nav - Using pry as a debugger == | |
Pry.commands.alias_command 'c', 'continue' rescue nil | |
Pry.commands.alias_command 's', 'step' rescue nil | |
Pry.commands.alias_command 'n', 'next' rescue nil | |
Pry.commands.alias_command 'r!', 'reload!' rescue nil | |
Pry.config.color = true |
study(title="Parabolic SAR", shorttitle="P-SAR", overlay=true) | |
start = input(2, minval=0, maxval=10, title="Start - Default = 2 - Multiplied by .01") | |
increment = input(2, minval=0, maxval=10, title="Step Setting (Sensitivity) - Default = 2 - Multiplied by .01" ) | |
maximum = input(2, minval=1, maxval=10, title="Maximum Step (Sensitivity) - Default = 2 - Multiplied by .10") | |
sus = input(true, "Show Up Trending Parabolic Sar") | |
sds = input(true, "Show Down Trending Parabolic Sar") | |
disc = input(false, title="Start and Step settings are *.01 so 2 = .02 etc, Maximum Step is *.10 so 2 = .2") | |
//"------Step Setting Definition------" | |
//"A higher step moves SAR closer to the price action, which makes a reversal more likely." |
// ==UserScript== | |
// @name TradingView editor options | |
// @namespace https://www.tradingview.com/ | |
// @version 1.0 | |
// @author bespokoid | |
// @match https://www.tradingview.com/* | |
// ==/UserScript== | |
(function() { | |
document.addEventListener("load", event => |
This is merely a gist of great speech made by Raymond Hettinger @raymondh at PyCon 2013 Original video can be enjoyed here and original slides can be found there
Almost all code snippets are presenting two or three ways of doing things: bad, ugly and pythonic :) I changed code a bit to make it Python3 compatible and added some notes regarding Python2/3 transition
# Python concurrecy sandbox, inspired by Ned Batchelder's (@nedbat) articles on Python concurrency and raising the progressbar (links below) | |
# Exec workfn() for every tuple generated by argsfn() in concurrent fashion. By default spans 1M tasks using different mechanics, draw progressbar and time execution | |
# Current example trying to calculate mean of the Beast, to do so we collect fractions of 666, pow them and calculate average | |
# If you want less satanic example, just implement workfn and argsfn functions to your liking. | |
# I haven't much time for this yet, was merely currious with Ned Batchelder code from his articles "Doing a pile of work" and "Do a pile of work better" | |
# Turned out Ned's solution caries some overhead, but my code also left much to be desired. In other words there is no danger of sudden bugs or ideas shortage | |
# Original articles by Ned Batchelder | |
# https://nedbatchelder.com/blog/202008/do_a_pile_of_work.html |