As configured in my dotfiles.
start new:
tmux
start new with session name:
// This bit is important. It detects/adds XMLHttpRequest.sendAsBinary. Without this | |
// you cannot send image data as part of a multipart/form-data encoded request from | |
// Javascript. This implementation depends on Uint8Array, so if the browser doesn't | |
// support either XMLHttpRequest.sendAsBinary or Uint8Array, then you will need to | |
// find yet another way to implement this. (This is left as an exercise for the reader, | |
// but if you do it, please let me know and I'll integrate it.) | |
// from: http://stackoverflow.com/a/5303242/945521 | |
if ( XMLHttpRequest.prototype.sendAsBinary === undefined ) { |
As configured in my dotfiles.
start new:
tmux
start new with session name:
# Installing OpenCV python libs on mac to work with virtualenv | |
# OpenCV 2.4.3 | |
# Python 2.7.3 installed with brew | |
# assuming you have virtualenv, pip, and python installed via brew | |
# assuming $WORKON_HOME is set to something like ~/.virtualenvs | |
# using homebrew - make sure we're current | |
brew update |
""" | |
This is a batched LSTM forward and backward pass | |
""" | |
import numpy as np | |
import code | |
class LSTM: | |
@staticmethod | |
def init(input_size, hidden_size, fancy_forget_bias_init = 3): |
#!/bin/bash | |
function test { | |
MESSAGE=$1 | |
RECEIVED=$2 | |
EXPECTED=$3 | |
if [ "$RECEIVED" = "$EXPECTED" ]; then | |
echo -e "\033[32m✔︎ Tested $MESSAGE" | |
else |
NOTE: the content is out-of-date. All development is moved to the https://github.com/yurydelendik/wasmception
# locations, e.g.
export WORKDIR=~/llvmwasm; mkdir -p $WORKDIR
export INSTALLDIR=$WORKDIR
These are the Kickstarter Engineering and Data role definitions for both teams.
console.log(1); | |
(_ => console.log(2))(); | |
eval('console.log(3);'); | |
console.log.call(null, 4); | |
console.log.apply(null, [5]); | |
new Function('console.log(6)')(); | |
Reflect.apply(console.log, null, [7]) | |
Reflect.construct(function(){console.log(8)}, []); | |
Function.prototype.apply.call(console.log, null, [9]); | |
Function.prototype.call.call(console.log, null, 10); |
For a brief user-level introduction to CMake, watch C++ Weekly, Episode 78, Intro to CMake by Jason Turner. LLVM’s CMake Primer provides a good high-level introduction to the CMake syntax. Go read it now.
After that, watch Mathieu Ropert’s CppCon 2017 talk Using Modern CMake Patterns to Enforce a Good Modular Design (slides). It provides a thorough explanation of what modern CMake is and why it is so much better than “old school” CMake. The modular design ideas in this talk are based on the book [Large-Scale C++ Software Design](https://www.amazon.de/Large-Scale-Soft