(by @andrestaltz)
If you prefer to watch video tutorials with live-coding, then check out this series I recorded with the same contents as in this article: Egghead.io - Introduction to Reactive Programming.
// | |
// JAZMusician.h | |
// JazzyApp | |
// | |
#import <Foundation/Foundation.h> | |
/** | |
JAZMusician models, you guessed it... Jazz Musicians! | |
From Ellington to Marsalis, this class has you covered. |
(by @andrestaltz)
If you prefer to watch video tutorials with live-coding, then check out this series I recorded with the same contents as in this article: Egghead.io - Introduction to Reactive Programming.
// [B](f: (A) ⇒ [B]): [B] ; Although the types in the arrays aren't strict (: | |
Array.prototype.flatMap = function(lambda) { | |
return Array.prototype.concat.apply([], this.map(lambda)); | |
}; |
This is how you connect PS3 controller to Mac OSX, PC, etc. when previously connected to a PS3. You will need a Mini USB cable. Overcome your laziness, get up of your chair, and go get one!
A big misconception is that keep holding PS button will reset the controller's pairing. It DOES NOT! From my testings, the controller keeps paring with the last machine it was CONNECTED VIA A USB CABLE.
Here are the steps:
THIS GIST WAS MOVED TO TERMSTANDARD/COLORS
REPOSITORY.
PLEASE ASK YOUR QUESTIONS OR ADD ANY SUGGESTIONS AS A REPOSITORY ISSUES OR PULL REQUESTS INSTEAD!
// simpler, faster, version that will throw a TypeError if the path is invalid | |
// by yorick | |
function extract(obj, key){ | |
return key.split('.').reduce(function(p, c) {return p[c]}, obj) | |
} | |
extract | |
// for example: |
; /usr/local/bin/nasm -f macho 32.asm && ld -macosx_version_min 10.7.0 -o 32 32.o && ./32 | |
global start | |
section .text | |
start: | |
push dword msg.len | |
push dword msg | |
push dword 1 | |
mov eax, 4 |
I'm working on a user search feature and would like some feedback about the best way to structure the creation of test data using pytest. Below I have defined a test file, test_basic.py, that defines fixture functions to create users and add them to my "database" of users:
@pytest.fixture
def user_alice():
alice = User('Alice')
users.append(alice)
return alice
The trick? pass the file descriptor from a parent process and have the server.listen reuse that descriptor. So multiprocess in their own memory space (but with ENV shared usually)
It does not balance, it leaves it to the kernel.
In the last nodejs > 0.8 there is a cluster module (functional although marked experimental)
To setup your computer to work with *.test domains, e.g. project.test, awesome.test and so on, without having to add to your hosts file each time.