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@Nagyman
Nagyman / workflows-in-django.md
Last active January 27, 2024 08:29
Workflows in Django

Workflows (States) in Django

I'm going to cover a simple, but effective, utility for managing state and transitions (aka workflow). We often need to store the state (status) of a model and it should only be in one state at a time.

Common Software Uses

  • Publishing (Draft->Approved->Published->Expired->Deleted)
@mikeal
mikeal / gist:9242748
Last active June 23, 2020 05:17
Response to Nodejitsu NPM Trademark

I've known people at nodejitsu for years, since before the company even existed. I still consider many of them friends. That said, somebody over there has lost their mind.

Trademarks are an important part of open source. They protect the integrity of the trust that is built by any project. A classic example of why this is the case is Firefox. Suppose that a malware producer takes the Firefox codebase, which is free and open source, packages up their malware with it and then releases it as "Firefox". Then they buy search advertising and suddenly their bad and malicious version of Firefox is the first result on search engines across the web. This is clearly a bad thing for Firefox and open source everywhere, but what can Mozilla do to protect their community of users?

They can't enforce a software license since the use is permitted under the Mozilla Public License. They can, however, enforce on these hypothetical bad actors using their trademark on the word "Fi

@mplewis
mplewis / flask-uwsgi-nginx-primer.md
Last active October 24, 2022 19:20
Flask + uWSGI + nginx Primer. I've been having trouble with serving a Flask app via uWSGI and nginx, so I thought I'd put together some of the basics to help out others.

Flask + uWSGI + nginx Primer

I've been having trouble with serving a Flask app via uWSGI and nginx, so I thought I'd put together some of the basics to help out others.

How this shit works

  • Flask is managed by uWSGI.
  • uWSGI talks to nginx.

steps to reproduce:

curl 'http://thequeue.org/cr?id=https%3A%2F%2Faaronsw.jottit.com%2Fhowtoget&title=Aaron%20Swartz:%20howtoget' > how-to-get.html
html2text.py how-to-get.html > how-to-get.md
gist < how-to-get.md

Aaron Swartz: howtoget

@javouhey
javouhey / 00-about.md
Created September 27, 2012 03:03 — forked from jasonrudolph/00-about.md
Rough Notes from Strange Loop 2012

About

This gist is a collection of my rough notes from Strange Loop 2012.

Follow me on Twitter to get updates as they're posted.

I'm posting these notes immediately after each talk. Expect typos, formatting glitches, incomplete thoughts, and ...

@earthgecko
earthgecko / bash.generate.random.alphanumeric.string.sh
Last active April 2, 2024 15:59
shell/bash generate random alphanumeric string
#!/bin/bash
# bash generate random alphanumeric string
#
# bash generate random 32 character alphanumeric string (upper and lowercase) and
NEW_UUID=$(cat /dev/urandom | tr -dc 'a-zA-Z0-9' | fold -w 32 | head -n 1)
# bash generate random 32 character alphanumeric string (lowercase only)
cat /dev/urandom | tr -dc 'a-z0-9' | fold -w 32 | head -n 1
@jeromyanglim
jeromyanglim / example-r-markdown.rmd
Created May 17, 2012 04:23
Example of using R Markdown
This post examines the features of [R Markdown](http://www.rstudio.org/docs/authoring/using_markdown)
using [knitr](http://yihui.name/knitr/) in Rstudio 0.96.
This combination of tools provides an exciting improvement in usability for
[reproducible analysis](http://stats.stackexchange.com/a/15006/183).
Specifically, this post
(1) discusses getting started with R Markdown and `knitr` in Rstudio 0.96;
(2) provides a basic example of producing console output and plots using R Markdown;
(3) highlights several code chunk options such as caching and controlling how input and output is displayed;
(4) demonstrates use of standard Markdown notation as well as the extended features of formulas and tables; and
(5) discusses the implications of R Markdown.
@addyosmani
addyosmani / pubsub.md
Created October 28, 2011 06:49
Four ways to do Pub/Sub with jQuery 1.7 and jQuery UI (in the future)

#Four Ways To Do Pub/Sub With jQuery and jQuery UI (in the future)

Between jQuery 1.7 and some of work going into future versions of jQuery UI, there are a ton of hot new ways for you to get your publish/subscribe on. Here are just four of them, three of which are new.

(PS: If you're unfamiliar with pub/sub, read the guide to it that Julian Aubourg and I wrote here http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/scriptjunkie/hh201955.aspx)

##Option 1: Using jQuery 1.7's $.Callbacks() feature:

$.Callbacks are a multi-purpose callbacks list object which can be used as a base layer to build new functionality including simple publish/subscribe systems. We haven't yet released the API documentation for this feature just yet, but for more information on it (including lots of examples), see my post on $.Callbacks() here:

@dcbriccetti
dcbriccetti / ImplicitTimerDemo.scala
Created July 12, 2011 14:31
Example of using implicit conversions to avoid creating anonymous inner classes
package sample
import java.util.{TimerTask, Timer}
/**
* Shows Java way of creating an anonymous inner class to supply the code for a TimerTask.
*/
object TimerDemo extends Application {
new Timer().schedule(new TimerTask {
def run() {
#!/usr/bin/env python
import sys, os, time, atexit
from signal import SIGTERM
class Daemon:
"""
A generic daemon class.
Usage: subclass the Daemon class and override the run() method