(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.
(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.
#!/bin/sh | |
### | |
# SOME COMMANDS WILL NOT WORK ON macOS (Sierra or newer) | |
# For Sierra or newer, see https://github.com/mathiasbynens/dotfiles/blob/master/.macos | |
### | |
# Alot of these configs have been taken from the various places | |
# on the web, most from here | |
# https://github.com/mathiasbynens/dotfiles/blob/5b3c8418ed42d93af2e647dc9d122f25cc034871/.osx |
https://rfc3161.ai.moda | |
https://rfc3161.ai.moda/adobe | |
https://rfc3161.ai.moda/microsoft | |
https://rfc3161.ai.moda/apple | |
https://rfc3161.ai.moda/any | |
http://rfc3161.ai.moda | |
http://timestamp.digicert.com | |
http://timestamp.globalsign.com/tsa/r6advanced1 | |
http://rfc3161timestamp.globalsign.com/advanced | |
http://timestamp.sectigo.com |
Copyright © 2016-2018 Fantasyland Institute of Learning. All rights reserved.
A function is a mapping from one set, called a domain, to another set, called the codomain. A function associates every element in the domain with exactly one element in the codomain. In Scala, both domain and codomain are types.
val square : Int => Int = x => x * x
Designing Event-Driven Systems book by Ben Stopford contains a lot of useful links to papers, books, documentation and definitions related to event driven design and Kafka. I just extracted them as reference for the future and added some groups to show them better.
You can read the book for free
#!/usr/bin/env sh | |
## | |
# This is script with usefull tips taken from: | |
# https://github.com/mathiasbynens/dotfiles/blob/master/.osx | |
# | |
# install it: | |
# curl -sL https://raw.github.com/gist/2108403/hack.sh | sh | |
# |
This tutorial guides you through creating your first Vagrant project.
We start with a generic Ubuntu VM, and use the Chef provisioning tool to:
Afterwards, we'll see how easy it is to package our newly provisioned VM
// Originally taken from https://github.com/mgtitimoli/await-mutex | |
class Mutex { | |
constructor() { | |
this._locking = Promise.resolve(); | |
this._locked = false; | |
} | |
isLocked() { | |
return this._locked; |
// Named constants with unique integer values | |
var C = {}; | |
// Tokenizer States | |
var START = C.START = 0x11; | |
var TRUE1 = C.TRUE1 = 0x21; | |
var TRUE2 = C.TRUE2 = 0x22; | |
var TRUE3 = C.TRUE3 = 0x23; | |
var FALSE1 = C.FALSE1 = 0x31; | |
var FALSE2 = C.FALSE2 = 0x32; | |
var FALSE3 = C.FALSE3 = 0x33; |
-nosplash | |
--launcher.defaultAction | |
openFile | |
-vm | |
C:/JDK7/jre/bin/server/jvm.dll #Windows | |
#/Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/jdk1.7.0_25.jdk/Contents/Home/bin/java #OS X | |
-vmargs | |
-Xincgc | |
-Xss1m | |
-Duser.name=FirstName LastName |