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@jgarte
jgarte / gist:4fb279152626dc9fd14ddcf488800e4c
Created December 22, 2020 23:04 — forked from CristinaSolana/gist:1885435
Keeping a fork up to date

1. Clone your fork:

git clone git@github.com:YOUR-USERNAME/YOUR-FORKED-REPO.git

2. Add remote from original repository in your forked repository:

cd into/cloned/fork-repo
git remote add upstream git://github.com/ORIGINAL-DEV-USERNAME/REPO-YOU-FORKED-FROM.git
git fetch upstream
@jgarte
jgarte / github-repo-stars.py
Created December 29, 2020 20:09 — forked from iamaziz/github-repo-stars.py
Scrape the stars count of a GitHub repo (beautifulSoup)
from bs4 import BeautifulSoup as bs
import requests
def stars_count(url):
html = requests.get(url).text
soup = bs(html, 'lxml')
stars_class = "social-count js-social-count"
stars = soup.find('a', class_=stars_class).text.strip()
return stars
@jgarte
jgarte / main.c
Created January 1, 2021 21:55 — forked from ncweinhold/main.c
Calling Gambit-C scheme functions from C
#include <stdio.h>
#define ___VERSION 406001
#include "gambit.h"
#include "somescheme.h"
#define SCHEME_LIBRARY_LINKER ____20_somescheme__
___BEGIN_C_LINKAGE
@jgarte
jgarte / UnderscoreFFI.js
Created January 2, 2021 06:24 — forked from paf31/UnderscoreFFI.js
Minimal UnderscoreJS Binding for PureScript
"use strict";
// module UnderscoreFFI
exports.map = function(f) {
return function (arr) {
return require('underscore').map(arr, f);
};
};
@jgarte
jgarte / lisp.lua
Created January 2, 2021 11:27 — forked from polymeris/lisp.lua
Toy Lisp interpreter in Lua / LPEG
local lpeg = require'lpeg'
local P, R, S = lpeg.P, lpeg.R, lpeg.S --patterns
local C, Ct = lpeg.C, lpeg.Ct --capture
local V = lpeg.V --variable
local parser = P {
'program', -- initial rule
program = Ct(V'sexpr' ^ 0),
wspace = S' \n\r\t' ^ 0,
atom = V'boolean' + V'integer' + V'string' + V'symbol',
@jgarte
jgarte / README.md
Created January 10, 2021 05:34 — forked from mrkpatchaa/README.md
Bulk delete github repos

Use this trick to bulk delete your old repos or old forks

(Inspired by https://medium.com/@icanhazedit/clean-up-unused-github-rpositories-c2549294ee45#.3hwv4nxv5)

  1. Open in a new tab all to-be-deleted github repositores (Use the mouse’s middle click or Ctrl + Click) https://github.com/username?tab=repositories

  2. Use one tab https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/onetab/chphlpgkkbolifaimnlloiipkdnihall to shorten them to a list.

  3. Save that list to some path

  4. The list should be in the form of “ur_username\repo_name” per line. Use regex search (Sublime text could help). Search for ' |.*' and replace by empty.

#!/usr/bin/env nix-shell
#!nix-shell -i bash -p bind.dnsutils -p traceroute -p curl
# impure: needs ping
#source: https://s3.amazonaws.com/aws-cloudfront-testing/CustomerTesting.html
function _e {
echo "> $@"
eval "$@" 2>&1 | sed -e "s/^/ /"
printf "Exit: %s\n\n\n" "$?"
}
@jgarte
jgarte / freecodecamp_intro_to_jamstack.md
Created January 31, 2021 04:36 — forked from philhawksworth/freecodecamp_intro_to_jamstack.md
freeCodeCamp - Introduction to JAMstack

freeCodeCamp Introduction to JAMstack

Here's a list of links to resources to accompany the "Introduction to JAMstack" video on freeCodeCamp, by Phil Hawksworth

Watch the video

JAMstack video

@jgarte
jgarte / syntax-rules.txt
Created March 7, 2021 07:33 — forked from tomjakubowski/syntax-rules.txt
"syntax-rules Primer for the Merely Eccentric" by Joe Marshall
JRM's Syntax-rules Primer for the Merely Eccentric
In learning to write Scheme macros, I have noticed that it is easy to
find both trivial examples and extraordinarily complex examples, but
there seem to be no intermediate ones. I have discovered a few tricks
in writing macros and perhaps some people will find them helpful.
The basic purpose of a macro is *syntactic* abstraction. As functions
allow you to extend the functionality of the underlying Scheme
language, macros allow you to extend the syntax. A well designed
@jgarte
jgarte / yana-chen-resume-2019.md
Created March 10, 2021 04:31
Yana Chen Resume 2019 in markdown

YANA CHEN

EXPERIENCE

Participant at Recurse Center, Sept 2019 - Present

  • learned more about Ruby:
  • learned the basics of how Ruby tokenizes, parses, and compiles code from "Ruby Under a Microscope" by Pat Shaughnessy
  • paired and soloed on Advent of Code 2018, exploring various CS fundamentals through puzzles