La di dah.
This sentence has a_long_var_with_underscores and stuff.
def foo():
"""This is a fenced code block"""
pass
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*- | |
""" | |
requests.auth | |
~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | |
This module contains the authentication handlers for Requests. | |
""" |
[ | |
{ | |
"backcolor": "#ffffff", | |
"name": "SofleKeyboard", | |
"author": "Josef Adamcik", | |
"switchMount": "cherry" | |
}, | |
[ | |
{ | |
"y": 0.2, |
export type Route = { | |
method: "*" | "GET" | "POST" | "PUT" | "PATCH" | "DELETE" | "HEAD" | "OPTIONS" | "CONNECT" | "TRACE" | |
path: string | |
regexp: RegExp | |
handler: (request: Request, route: MatchedRoute) => Promise<Response> | |
} | |
export type MatchedRoute = Route & { | |
url: URL | |
} |
/* | |
* Copyright (c) 2022 The ZMK Contributors | |
* | |
* SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT | |
*/ | |
#include <dt-bindings/zmk/matrix_transform.h> | |
/ { | |
chosen { |
La di dah.
This sentence has a_long_var_with_underscores and stuff.
def foo():
"""This is a fenced code block"""
pass
FigJam: https://www.figma.com/file/ERabwh2yCmH1G6Y7aS9VVs/Next-Semester-Planning-Mar22?node-id=0%3A1
function branchclean | |
# delete branches that are not called 'main' or 'master' | |
# Invoke with -r to also delete the branches on the origin remote | |
# WARNING — this doesn't check if the branches are merged. | |
argparse 'r/remote' -- $argv | |
for b in (git branch | grep -v "^\*\?\s\+\(master\|main\)\$" | string trim); | |
git branch --delete $b; | |
if test -n "$_flag_r" | |
git push -d origin $b |
Wandering the halls of the Internet today, it's hard to miss a certain kind of discourse on data. Big data, bigger data, biggest data. A million rows aren't cool. You know what's cool? A billion rows. Distributed data systems that slip the surly bonds of any one machine. Techniques for sampling and transforming data while it moves. Strategies for contending with a deluge of events from chatty devices. Directing those data tributaries into undifferentiated data lakes so that we may pose different queries onto the data someday. It has become almost impossible to talk about this stuff without abusing metaphors way past their safe design limits.
As a developer, all those bits occupying the proverbial lake/warehouse/refinery are as immediately useful as a grape seed is to a winery. Locality of data isn't some abstract concept when you're trying to build things on top of that data — it's the leading term of developer experiences. If I have the data, I can load it, and get to work. If I don't have the data, then
Hello there! This is a sample post for gist.io, a super-lightweight writing soapbox for hackers.
Now look up. Further. Above the post title. See that grey text with the gist ID?
Now back to me. That grey text is a link! Open that sucker in a new tab to see the source for this post. Also, I'm on a horse.
If you peek at it with a web inspector, you'll see that it is a second-level heading. You can use first level headings, but they'll look just like the second level ones, and the gods of the HTML5 outlining algorithm will frown upon you.