A very brief guide to Rust syntax. It assumes you are already familiar with programming concepts.
This was written in 2014. It is not a good reference for Rust today, though the content is still correct.
cheats.rs looks like a good alternative.
import logging | |
import os | |
import sys | |
import traceback | |
from contextlib import contextmanager | |
import diart.operators as dops | |
import numpy as np | |
import rich | |
import rx.operators as ops |
<html> | |
<head> | |
<title>Simulated typing</title> | |
</head> | |
<body> | |
<input type="text" id="transcribe-searchbox" placeholder="Escribe Aquí"> | |
<input type="button" id="transcribe-button" value="Transcibir a Andaluz"> | |
</body> | |
<script> | |
// Quotes to simulate typing, then deletion |
# run from the environment you want to add to jupyter. | |
# --name myenv is just the internal name ipykernel gives to the kernel | |
source activate myenv | |
python -m ipykernel install --user --name myenv --display-name "Python (myenv)" |
Key Sublime Text 3.2.1 Build 3207 | |
----- BEGIN LICENSE ----- | |
Member J2TeaM | |
Single User License | |
EA7E-1011316 | |
D7DA350E 1B8B0760 972F8B60 F3E64036 | |
B9B4E234 F356F38F 0AD1E3B7 0E9C5FAD | |
FA0A2ABE 25F65BD8 D51458E5 3923CE80 | |
87428428 79079A01 AA69F319 A1AF29A4 | |
A684C2DC 0B1583D4 19CBD290 217618CD |
Alaska | |
POLYGON((-141.0205 70.0187,-141.7291 70.1292,-144.8163 70.4515,-148.4583 70.7471,-151.1609 70.7923,-152.6221 71.1470,-153.9954 71.1185,-154.8853 71.4307,-156.7529 71.5232,-157.9449 71.2796,-159.6313 71.2249,-161.8671 70.6363,-163.5809 70.0843,-165.2399 69.3028,-166.8768 69.1782,-168.0414 68.3344,-165.9155 67.6844,-164.6082 67.2933,-164.0149 66.7789,-165.7507 66.5810,-167.5745 66.2867,-168.9862 66.0269,-168.9478 65.4970,-167.4756 65.0420,-167.0142 64.3922,-165.7343 64.0554,-163.2294 64.0193,-162.1143 63.9615,-163.6029 63.6877,-165.3717 63.4530,-166.3715 62.4133,-166.9867 61.6534,-166.4429 60.8556,-167.8381 60.5357,-167.7118 59.5482,-165.8002 59.4115,-164.5972 59.3696,-162.8558 59.1168,-162.5427 58.1185,-160.6421 58.1359,-159.5050 58.0285,-158.8953 57.6336,-159.9060 56.9090,-160.6531 56.3926,-161.8835 56.2342,-162.9822 55.7240,-164.3994 55.2478,-165.3168 54.7753,-167.1075 54.1463,-168.5852 53.5632,-169.9146 53.1402,-169.5959 52.5964,-168.2227 52.9089,-162.7734 54.2139,-159.1452 54.6786,-155.4634 55.656 |
A very brief guide to Rust syntax. It assumes you are already familiar with programming concepts.
This was written in 2014. It is not a good reference for Rust today, though the content is still correct.
cheats.rs looks like a good alternative.