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@crofty
crofty / index.html
Last active October 22, 2021 08:24
A example of using Google Map tiles with the Leaflet mapping library - http://matchingnotes.com/using-google-map-tiles-with-leaflet
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>Leaflet</title>
<link rel="stylesheet" href="http://cdn.leafletjs.com/leaflet-0.3.1/leaflet.css" />
<script src="http://cdn.leafletjs.com/leaflet-0.3.1/leaflet.js"></script>
<script src="http://maps.google.com/maps/api/js?v=3.2&sensor=false"></script>
<script src="http://matchingnotes.com/javascripts/leaflet-google.js"></script>
</head>
<body>
@stevenharman
stevenharman / 01_spec_helper.rb
Last active October 7, 2019 07:19
Sensible RSpec config for clean, and slightly faster, specs.
ENV["RAILS_ENV"] ||= 'test'
require File.expand_path("../../config/environment", __FILE__)
require 'rspec/rails'
require 'rspec/autorun'
require 'capybara/rspec'
require 'webmock/rspec'
require 'factory_girl'
require 'factory_girl_rails'
Dir[Rails.root.join("spec/support/**/*.rb")].each {|f| require f}
@kazpsp
kazpsp / passwords_controller.rb
Created August 14, 2012 16:40 — forked from guilleiguaran/passwords_controller.rb
StrongParameters with Devise
# app/controllers/users/password_controller.rb
class Users::PasswordsController < Devise::PasswordsController
def resource_params
params.require(:user).permit(:email, :password, :password_confirmation)
end
private :resource_params
end
@markbates
markbates / gist:4240848
Created December 8, 2012 16:06
Getting Started with Rack

If you're writing web applications with Ruby there comes a time when you might need something a lot simpler, or even faster, than Ruby on Rails or the Sinatra micro-framework. Enter Rack.

Rack describes itself as follows:

Rack provides a minimal interface between webservers supporting Ruby and Ruby frameworks.

Before Rack came along Ruby web frameworks all implemented their own interfaces, which made it incredibly difficult to write web servers for them, or to share code between two different frameworks. Now almost all Ruby web frameworks implement Rack, including Rails and Sinatra, meaning that these applications can now behave in a similar fashion to one another.

At it's core Rack provides a great set of tools to allow you to build the most simple web application or interface you can. Rack applications can be written in a single line of code. But we're getting ahead of ourselves a bit.

@mattt
mattt / uiappearance-selector.md
Last active June 4, 2024 13:28
A list of methods and properties conforming to `UIAppearance` as of iOS 12 Beta 3

Generate the list yourself:

$ cd /Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/iPhoneOS.platform/Developer/SDKs/iPhoneOS*.sdk/System/Library/Frameworks/UIKit.framework/Headers
$ grep UI_APPEARANCE_SELECTOR ./*     | \
  sed 's/NS_AVAILABLE_IOS(.*)//g'     | \
  sed 's/NS_DEPRECATED_IOS(.*)//g'    | \
  sed 's/API_AVAILABLE(.*)//g'        | \
  sed 's/API_UNAVAILABLE(.*)//g'      | \
 sed 's/UI_APPEARANCE_SELECTOR//g' | \
class Foo
public def my_public_method
1 + 2
end
protected def my_protected_method
3 + 4
end
private def my_private_method
@jacklynrose
jacklynrose / fib_calculator.rb
Created April 19, 2014 11:13
Fast and memory efficient fib calculation based off Ray Hightower's memoization method but with better memory usage (http://rayhightower.com/blog/2014/04/12/recursion-and-memoization/)
# Fibonacci numbers WITH memoization.
# Initialize the memoization hash.
@scratchpad = {}
@max_fibo_size = 1_000_000_000_000
# Calculate the nth Fibonacci number, f(n).
def fibo (n)
val = if n <= 1
n
@staltz
staltz / introrx.md
Last active July 22, 2024 09:31
The introduction to Reactive Programming you've been missing
@addyosmani
addyosmani / README.md
Last active July 13, 2024 21:26 — forked from 140bytes/LICENSE.txt
108 byte CSS Layout Debugger

CSS Layout Debugger

A tweet-sized debugger for visualizing your CSS layouts. Outlines every DOM element on your page a random (valid) CSS hex color.

One-line version to paste in your DevTools

Use $$ if your browser aliases it:

~ 108 byte version

@wvengen
wvengen / README.md
Last active March 25, 2024 07:53
Ruby memory analysis over time

Finding a Ruby memory leak using a time analysis

When developing a program in Ruby, you may sometimes encounter a memory leak. For a while now, Ruby has a facility to gather information about what objects are laying around: ObjectSpace.

There are several approaches one can take to debug a leak. This discusses a time-based approach, where a full memory dump is generated every, say, 5 minutes, during a time that the memory leak is showing up. Afterwards, one can look at all the objects, and find out which ones are staying around, causing the