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@tvogel
tvogel / git-merge-associate
Created March 30, 2011 13:23
git script to manually associate files in a conflicting merge when rename detection fails
#!/bin/bash
#
# Purpose: manually associate missed renames in merge conflicts
#
# Usage: git merge-associate <our-target> <base> <theirs>
#
# Example: After a failed rename detection A/a -> B/b which results
# in CONFLICT (delete/modify) for A/a and corresponding "deleted by us"
# messages in git status, the following invocation can be used to manually
# establish the link:
@maephisto
maephisto / Javascript ISO country code to country name conversion
Last active November 3, 2023 21:05
ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 country code to country name conversion with a simple Javascript implementation, an array and a function.
var isoCountries = {
'AF' : 'Afghanistan',
'AX' : 'Aland Islands',
'AL' : 'Albania',
'DZ' : 'Algeria',
'AS' : 'American Samoa',
'AD' : 'Andorra',
'AO' : 'Angola',
'AI' : 'Anguilla',
'AQ' : 'Antarctica',
@vitorbritto
vitorbritto / rm_mysql.md
Last active July 5, 2024 17:22
Remove MySQL completely from Mac OSX

Remove MySQL completely

  1. Open the Terminal

  2. Use mysqldump to backup your databases

  3. Check for MySQL processes with: ps -ax | grep mysql

  4. Stop and kill any MySQL processes

  5. Analyze MySQL on HomeBrew:

    brew remove mysql
    
@brennanMKE
brennanMKE / hero.ts
Last active July 15, 2024 15:25
Example of Mongoose with TypeScript and MongoDb
import * as mongoose from 'mongoose';
export let Schema = mongoose.Schema;
export let ObjectId = mongoose.Schema.Types.ObjectId;
export let Mixed = mongoose.Schema.Types.Mixed;
export interface IHeroModel extends mongoose.Document {
name: string;
power: string;
@stereokai
stereokai / gist:36dc0095b9d24ce93b045e2ddc60d7a0
Last active July 10, 2024 00:23
CSS rounded corners with gradient border
.rounded-corners-gradient-borders {
width: 300px;
height: 80px;
border: double 4px transparent;
border-radius: 80px;
background-image: linear-gradient(white, white), radial-gradient(circle at top left, #f00,#3020ff);
background-origin: border-box;
background-clip: padding-box, border-box;
}

Oh my zsh.

Install with curl

sh -c "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/robbyrussell/oh-my-zsh/master/tools/install.sh)"

Enabling Plugins (zsh-autosuggestions & zsh-syntax-highlighting)

  • Download zsh-autosuggestions by
@Rich-Harris
Rich-Harris / footgun.md
Last active July 8, 2024 03:54
Top-level `await` is a footgun

Edit — February 2019

This gist had a far larger impact than I imagined it would, and apparently people are still finding it, so a quick update:

  • TC39 is currently moving forward with a slightly different version of TLA, referred to as 'variant B', in which a module with TLA doesn't block sibling execution. This vastly reduces the danger of parallelizable work happening in serial and thereby delaying startup, which was the concern that motivated me to write this gist
  • In the wild, we're seeing (async main(){...}()) as a substitute for TLA. This completely eliminates the blocking problem (yay!) but it's less powerful, and harder to statically analyse (boo). In other words the lack of TLA is causing real problems
  • Therefore, a version of TLA that solves the original issue is a valuable addition to the language, and I'm in full support of the current proposal, which you can read here.

I'll leave the rest of this document unedited, for archaeological

@Rich-Harris
Rich-Harris / module-loading.md
Last active April 19, 2023 09:11
Dynamic module loading done right

Dynamic module loading done right

Follow-up to Top-level await is a footgun – maybe read that first

Here are some things I believe to be true:

  1. Static module syntax is beneficial in lots of ways – code is easier to write (you get better linting etc) and easier to optimise (tree-shaking and other things that are only really possible with static syntax), and most importantly, faster to load (it's trivial for a module loader to load multiple dependencies concurrently when they're declared with a static syntax – not so with imperative statements like require(...) or await import(...)).
  2. App startup time is perhaps when performance is most critical. (You already know this, I don't need to cite the studies.)
  3. If you're in favour of constructs that jeopardise app startup time, you are anti-user. Top-level await is such a construct.
@Rich-Harris
Rich-Harris / imperative-v-declarative-imports.md
Last active May 6, 2024 10:23
Why imperative imports are slower than declarative imports

Why imperative imports are slower than declarative imports

A lot of people misunderstood Top-level await is a footgun, including me. I thought the primary danger was that people would be able to put things like AJAX requests in their top-level await expressions, and that this was terrible because await strongly encourages sequential operations even though a lot of the asynchronous activity we're talking about should actually happen concurrently.

But that's not the worst of it. Imperative module loading is intrinsically bad for app startup performance, in ways that are quite subtle.

Consider an app like this:

// main.js
@Rich-Harris
Rich-Harris / module-ordering.md
Last active March 23, 2022 19:22
Non-deterministic module ordering is an even bigger footgun

Non-deterministic module ordering is an even bigger footgun

Update – in the comments below, @bmeck clarifies that statically imported modules do evaluate in a deterministic sequential order, contra the Hacker News comments that prompted this gist.

Another follow-up to Top-level await is a footgun. On the Hacker News comments, Domenic says this:

(The argument also seems to be predicated on some fundamental misunderstandings, in that it thinks everything would have to be sequentialized. See my other replies throughout this thread.)

In other words, if you have an app like this...