Goals: Add links that are reasonable and good explanations of how stuff works. No hype and no vendor content if possible. Practical first-hand accounts of models in prod eagerly sought.
-- When SQLite is compiled with the JSON1 extensions it provides builtin tools | |
-- for manipulating JSON data stored in the database. | |
-- This is a gist showing SQLite return query data as a JSON object. | |
-- https://www.sqlite.org/json1.html | |
-- An example table with some data | |
CREATE TABLE users ( | |
id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY NOT NULL, | |
full_name TEXT NOT NULL, | |
email TEXT NOT NULL, |
- Create or find a gist that you own.
- Clone your gist (replace
<hash>
with your gist's hash):# with ssh git clone git@gist.github.com:<hash>.git mygist # with https
git clone https://gist.github.com/.git mygist
- [API] (#api)
- RasterLang
Write a program that does what it’s supposed to do | |
Write idiomatic code | |
Debug a program that you wrote | |
Debug a program someone else wrote | |
Debug the interaction between a system you wrote and one you didn’t | |
File a good bug report | |
Modify a program you didn’t write | |
Test a program you wrote | |
Test a program you didn’t write | |
Learn a new programming language |
This gist provides a minimal setup and example of the git collaborate exercise for SWC (e.g., here). Use setup.sh to get a minimal working repository example. A repos represent the master upstream version, B and C repos represent forks. *-remote directories represent Github repos (and forks), while ~*-local` directories correspond to local copies. exercise.sh goes through what students will see for both the PR execise and "experiencing a conflict".
This list of resources is all about acquring and processing aerial imagery. It's generally broken up in three ways: how to go about this in Photoshop/GIMP, using command-line tools, or in GIS software, depending what's most comfortable to you. Often these tools can be used in conjunction with each other.
- USGS Earth Explorer - Browser and data access (create a login)
http://earthexplorer.usgs.gov/
- Landsat archive