Skip to content

Instantly share code, notes, and snippets.

@nicoleslaw
nicoleslaw / 1_Tiny_Content_Framework.md
Last active January 23, 2024 02:28
Tiny Content Framework

Tiny Content Framework

About the project

This is a tiny content strategy framework focused on goals, messages, and branding. This is not a checklist. Use what you need and scrap the rest. Rewrite it or add to it. These topics should help you get to the bottom of things with clients and other people you work with.

Give me feedback on Twitter (@nicoleslaw) or by email (nicole@nicolefenton.com).

Contents

@markjaquith
markjaquith / gist:2653957
Created May 10, 2012 15:36
WordPress Fragment Caching convenience wrapper
<?php
/*
Usage:
$frag = new CWS_Fragment_Cache( 'unique-key', 3600 ); // Second param is TTL
if ( !$frag->output() ) { // NOTE, testing for a return of false
functions_that_do_stuff_live();
these_should_echo();
// IMPORTANT
$frag->store();
// YOU CANNOT FORGET THIS. If you do, the site will break.
@robinsloan
robinsloan / langoliers.rb
Last active April 7, 2024 13:22
The Langoliers, a tweet deletion script
require "rubygems"
require "twitter"
require "json"
# things you must configure
TWITTER_USER = "your_username"
MAX_AGE_IN_DAYS = 1 # anything older than this is deleted
# get these from dev.twitter.com
CONSUMER_KEY = "your_consumer_key"

Introduction

  • C-a == Ctrl-a
  • M-a == Alt-a

General

:q        close
:w        write/saves
:wa[!]    write/save all windows [force]
:wq       write/save and close
@malarkey
malarkey / Contract Killer 3.md
Last active May 24, 2024 23:38
The latest version of my ‘killer contract’ for web designers and developers

When times get tough and people get nasty, you’ll need more than a killer smile. You’ll need a killer contract.

Used by 1000s of designers and developers Clarify what’s expected on both sides Helps build great relationships between you and your clients Plain and simple, no legal jargon Customisable to suit your business Used on countless web projects since 2008

…………………………

@jrfnl
jrfnl / wp-config-debug.php
Last active May 23, 2024 07:06
Code to add to wp-config.php to enhance information available for debugging.
<?php
/**
* == About this Gist ==
*
* Code to add to wp-config.php to enhance information available for debugging.
*
* You would typically add this code below the database, language and salt settings
*
* Oh.. and *do* make sure you change the path to the log file to a proper file path on your server (make sure it exists).
*
@tim-peterson
tim-peterson / UploadHandlerS3.php
Last active January 28, 2021 23:42
jQuery-File-Upload S3 PHP upload directly using AWS PHP SDK V2 (w/ optional Dropbox Chooser-selected files) https://github.com/blueimp/jQuery-File-Upload
<?php
use Aws\Common\Aws;
use Aws\S3\Exception\S3Exception;
// make sure the SDK is installed
// I've used Composer to autoload it: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/aws-sdk-php/guide/latest/installation.html
/*
* jQuery File Upload Plugin PHP Class 7.1.0
* https://github.com/blueimp/jQuery-File-Upload
@carlalexander
carlalexander / AdminPage.php
Last active January 27, 2024 14:07
WordPress and the single responsibility principle
<?php
namespace WPMemeShortcode;
/**
* The WordPress Meme Shortcode admin page.
*
* @author Carl Alexander
*/
class AdminPage
@natelandau
natelandau / .bash_profile
Last active June 4, 2024 09:44
Mac OSX Bash Profile
# ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
#
# Description: This file holds all my BASH configurations and aliases
#
# Sections:
# 1. Environment Configuration
# 2. Make Terminal Better (remapping defaults and adding functionality)
# 3. File and Folder Management
# 4. Searching
# 5. Process Management
@aparrish
aparrish / exercise_b.py
Created February 10, 2015 15:53
RWET Programming Exercise B
#
# RWET Programming Exercise B
#
# This worksheet is also a Python program. Your task is to read the
# task descriptions below and then write one or more Python statements to
# carry out the tasks. There's a Python "print" statement before each
# task that will display the expected output for that task; you can use
# this to ensure that your statements are correct.
#