I'm assuming you need this version for Emscripten.
Don't worry, this script will not override your current installation of LLVM and Clang.
Be sure that you have:
- read this
README
file - read this
README
file
Ideas are cheap. Make a prototype, sketch a CLI session, draw a wireframe. Discuss around concrete examples, not hand-waving abstractions. Don't say you did something, provide a URL that proves it.
Nothing is real until it's being used by a real user. This doesn't mean you make a prototype in the morning and blog about it in the evening. It means you find one person you believe your product will help and try to get them to use it.
// prevent back/forward gestures when scrolling an element left/right on OS X | |
var preventHistorySwipe = function(element) { | |
// not even on the right platform bro | |
if (navigator.userAgent.indexOf('Macintosh') === -1) return; | |
element.addEventListener('mousewheel', function(e) { | |
var x = e.wheelDeltaX; | |
// scrolling up or down? then i don't give a shit | |
if (x === 0) return; |
var request = require('supertest'), | |
should = require('should'), | |
app = require('../server'); | |
var Cookies; | |
describe('Functional Test <Sessions>:', function () { | |
it('should create user session for valid user', function (done) { | |
request(app) | |
.post('/v1/sessions') |
var serialport = require('node-serialport') | |
var sp = new serialport.SerialPort("/dev/ttyO3", { | |
parser: serialport.parsers.raw, | |
baud: 9600 | |
}) | |
sp.on('data', function(chunk) { | |
console.log(chunk.toString('hex'), chunk.toString(), chunk) | |
}) |
/* | |
* Helper functions for treating node Buffer instances as C "pointers". | |
*/ | |
#include "v8.h" | |
#include "node_buffer.h" | |
/* | |
* Called when the "pointer" is garbage collected. |
Sicilian Rhapsody - @andyet
Redis Manifesto - @antirez
Redis - @pietern
Redis Analytics - @jseibert
http://www.slideshare.net/crashlytics/crashlytics-on-redis-analytics
From https://gist.github.com/3050224
From http://blog.smartcore.net.au/smartos-the-basics/
As it turns out, most normal humans are incapable of learning to use Twitter @ replies. And in case you don't follow me on Twitter: yes, my handle (@ryan) gets a lot of erroneous mentions. (The most amusing, random ones I've even taken to retweeting under the #wrongryan hashtag.)
Then Tweetbot -- and its ability to use regex as Twitter filters -- came along. Here's how the Tapbots guys and some regular expressions single-handedly made my Twitter replies usable again.
Notes and caveats
expression{3,}
) are buggy. So everything below should work without crashing Tweetbot for iPhone, iPad, and Mac.