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@lelandbatey
lelandbatey / whiteboardCleaner.md
Last active June 16, 2024 13:44
Whiteboard Picture Cleaner - Shell one-liner/script to clean up and beautify photos of whiteboards!

Description

This simple script will take a picture of a whiteboard and use parts of the ImageMagick library with sane defaults to clean it up tremendously.

The script is here:

#!/bin/bash
convert "$1" -morphology Convolve DoG:15,100,0 -negate -normalize -blur 0x1 -channel RBG -level 60%,91%,0.1 "$2"

Results

@chrisbanes
chrisbanes / FloatLabelLayout.java
Last active March 15, 2024 06:39
FloatLabelLayout
/*
* Copyright 2014 Chris Banes
*
* Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
* you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
* You may obtain a copy of the License at
*
* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
@gabrielemariotti
gabrielemariotti / Readme.md
Last active March 2, 2024 23:10
A SimpleSectionedRecyclerViewAdapter: use this class to realize a simple sectioned `RecyclerView.Adapter`.

You can use this class to realize a simple sectioned RecyclerView.Adapter without changing your code.

The RecyclerView should use a LinearLayoutManager. You can use this code also with the TwoWayView with the ListLayoutManager (https://github.com/lucasr/twoway-view)

This is a porting of the class SimpleSectionedListAdapter provided by Google

Screen

Example:

@dlew
dlew / themes-debug.xml
Last active March 1, 2024 15:46
With the new theming in AppCompat, a lot of assets are tinted automatically for you via theme attributes. That has often led me to wonder "where the hell did this color come from?" You can replace your normal theme with this debug theme to help figure out the source of that color.
<!-- You can change the parent around to whatever you normally use -->
<style name="DebugColors" parent="Theme.AppCompat">
<!-- System colors -->
<item name="android:windowBackground">@color/__debugWindowBackground</item>
<item name="android:colorPressedHighlight">#FF4400</item>
<item name="android:colorLongPressedHighlight">#FF0044</item>
<item name="android:colorFocusedHighlight">#44FF00</item>
<item name="android:colorActivatedHighlight">#00FF44</item>
# It's relatively easy to run Apple XCTest on OS X and swift-corelibs-xctest on Linux.
# Just look at apple/swift-corelibs-foundation for an example.
#
# But it's pretty difficult to run swift-corelibs-xctest on OS X.
#
# Let's say we have the following file:
#
# // main.swift
# import XCTest
# XCTMain([])
@umbernhard
umbernhard / arch-secure-install.md
Last active June 20, 2024 11:27
Building a Secure Arch Linux Device

Building a Secure Arch Linux Device

Locking down a linux machine is getting easier by the day. Recent advancements in systemd-boot have enabled a host of features to help users ensure that their machines have not been tampered with. This guide provides a walkthrough of how to turn on many of these features during installation, as well as reasoning for why certain features help improve security.

The steps laid out below draw on a wide variety of existing resources, and in places I'll point to them rather than attempt to regurgitate full explanations of the various security components. The most significant one, which I highly encourage everyone to read, is Rod Smith's site about secure boot, which is the most comprehensive and cogent explanation of UEFI, boot managers and boot loaders, and secure boot. Another incredibly useful resources is Safeboot, which encapsulates many of the setup steps below in a Debian application.