Taken from: https://stackoverflow.com/a/7411851/12158779
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#define ANALOG_IN 0 | |
void setup() { | |
Serial.begin(9600); | |
//Serial.begin(115200); | |
} | |
void loop() { | |
int val = analogRead(ANALOG_IN); | |
Serial.write( 0xff ); |
#!/bin/bash | |
# https://gist.github.com/robwierzbowski/5430952/ | |
# Create and push to a new github repo from the command line. | |
# Grabs sensible defaults from the containing folder and `.gitconfig`. | |
# Refinements welcome. | |
# Gather constant vars | |
CURRENTDIR=${PWD##*/} | |
GITHUBUSER=$(git config github.user) |
""" | |
Add copy to clipboard from IPython! | |
To install, just copy it to your profile/startup directory, typically: | |
~/.ipython/profile_default/startup/ | |
Example usage: | |
%clip hello world | |
# will store "hello world" |
Taken from: https://stackoverflow.com/a/7411851/12158779
In normal mode:
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: append
b
: beginning (of current or previous word)
c
: change
Normally, when you're watching a TV-Show — you don't need all its episodes right away; you just need a few for the next hour or so. The following scripts help you with exactly this! plex-autotag.py marks the new shows you add with tag keep1
; plex-autodelete.py removes watched episodes from your drive; sonarr-refresher.py triggers sonarr to download few new episodes, to keep you always having your next fix. All in all — sonarr will download you a new episode after you've watched one.
All this magic works only for "main" user.
The autodelete script was originally taken from plex-api and then it was modified to remove only watched episodes, plus I've added a couple of tags.
It would've been better to make the sonarr script to work directly with Plex API instead of relying on the deleted files, but I'm not there yet.
A simple "1-click" javascript approach to downloading a scanned book from archive.org to read at your leisure on the device of your choosing w/out having to manually screenshot every pages of the book by hand. In short it's a glorified "Save Image As..." approach but consolidated down to "1 click". BTW there may be a much better option than this out there - I just built this as an autistic project to see if it would work.
By using this script you agree to delete all book files/images after your 1 hour or 14 days is up! I don't support using this script for any other use cases. After all, none of us have ever kept a library book past it's return date, right?