On Mac, Homebrew is the de-facto package manager, and Homebrew Cask is the app manager. I’m going to use Cask to install Java 7 and 8.
Install Homebrew Cask first if you haven’t:
brew update
brew tap caskroom/cask
#!/usr/bin/env bash | |
# First, store your PERSONAL GITHUB TOKEN as secret file somewhere. | |
# You can generate your personal github token here: https://github.com/settings/tokens. Check the | |
# "Full control of private repositories" scope. | |
# In the example below, token is stored as a json file "github_token.json" under secrets directory in the form of: | |
# { "token": "PERSONAL_GITHUB_TOKEN" } | |
# Check Secrets | |
[[ -f secrets/github_token.json ]] || { echo "Error: github token is unavailable!" >&2; exit 1; } |
type Set struct { | |
list map[int]struct{} //empty structs occupy 0 memory | |
} | |
func (s *Set) Has(v int) bool { | |
_, ok := s.list[v] | |
return ok | |
} |
bind -T root F12 \ | |
set prefix None \;\ | |
set key-table off \;\ | |
set status-style "fg=$color_status_text,bg=$color_window_off_status_bg" \;\ | |
set window-status-current-format "#[fg=$color_window_off_status_bg,bg=$color_window_off_status_current_bg]$separator_powerline_right#[default] #I:#W# #[fg=$color_window_off_status_current_bg,bg=$color_window_off_status_bg]$separator_powerline_right#[default]" \;\ | |
set window-status-current-style "fg=$color_dark,bold,bg=$color_window_off_status_current_bg" \;\ | |
if -F '#{pane_in_mode}' 'send-keys -X cancel' \;\ | |
refresh-client -S \;\ | |
bind -T off F12 \ |
// | |
// MIT License | |
// | |
// Copyright (c) 2018 Ali Sharif | |
// | |
// Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy | |
// of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal | |
// in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights | |
// to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell | |
// copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is |
# Below are the dependencies required for installing the common combination of numpy, scipy, pandas and matplotlib | |
# in an Alpine based Docker image. | |
FROM alpine:3.4 | |
RUN echo "http://dl-8.alpinelinux.org/alpine/edge/community" >> /etc/apk/repositories | |
RUN apk --no-cache --update-cache add gcc gfortran python python-dev py-pip build-base wget freetype-dev libpng-dev openblas-dev | |
RUN ln -s /usr/include/locale.h /usr/include/xlocale.h | |
RUN pip install numpy scipy pandas matplotlib | |
Kinesis Freestyle (Terrible key switches. Mushy and un-lovable)
Kinesis Freestyle Edge (Traditional layout with too many keys, mech switches, proably too big to be tented easily/properly)
Matias Ergo Pro (Looks pretty great. Have not tried.)
ErgoDox Kit (Currently, my everyday keyboard. Can buy pre-assembled on eBay.)
ErgoDox EZ (Prolly the best option for most people.)
@credit Yan Zhu (https://github.com/nina-zhu)
Flask is a microframework for Python based on Werkzeug, Jinja 2 and good intentions, it can help you get your Python application or website off the ground. Flask includes a simplified development server for testing your code locally, but for anything even slightly production related, a more secure and powerful web server is required.
In this guide, we will demonstrate how to install and configure some components on Ubuntu 14.04 to support and serve Flask applications. We will configure the uWSGI application container server to interface with our applications. We will then set up Nginx to reverse proxy to uWSGI, giving us access to its security and performance features to serve our apps.
upstream example-webpack { | |
server 127.0.0.1:8080; | |
} | |
upstream example-backend { | |
server 127.0.0.1:3000; | |
} | |
server { | |
listen 80; |