It creates randomised pairings from the given inputs.
Simple:
╭─{ yaauie@durin:~ }
╰─● rando-pair Alice Bob Charlie Donald Evelyn Frank Gertrude
// Just before switching jobs: | |
// Add one of these. | |
// Preferably into the same commit where you do a large merge. | |
// | |
// This started as a tweet with a joke of "C++ pro-tip: #define private public", | |
// and then it quickly escalated into more and more evil suggestions. | |
// I've tried to capture interesting suggestions here. | |
// | |
// Contributors: @r2d2rigo, @joeldevahl, @msinilo, @_Humus_, | |
// @YuriyODonnell, @rygorous, @cmuratori, @mike_acton, @grumpygiant, |
You may have thought of running nightmare on AWS Lambda. But before we can run it on Lambda, we need first to make it run on Amazon Linux.
According to AWS Documentation on Lambda Execution Environment and available Libraries we would need this AMI image with this alias amzn-ami-hvm-2016.03.3.x86_64-gp2
. Keep in mind that AMI-image-id for this instance would be different in different regions (eg):
eu-west-1
- ami-f9dd458a
us-east-1
- ami-6869aa05