Each of these commands will run an ad hoc http static server in your current (or specified) directory, available at http://localhost:8000. Use this power wisely.
$ python -m SimpleHTTPServer 8000
Each of these commands will run an ad hoc http static server in your current (or specified) directory, available at http://localhost:8000. Use this power wisely.
$ python -m SimpleHTTPServer 8000
For this configuration you can use web server you like, i decided, because i work mostly with it to use nginx.
Generally, properly configured nginx can handle up to 400K to 500K requests per second (clustered), most what i saw is 50K to 80K (non-clustered) requests per second and 30% CPU load, course, this was 2 x Intel Xeon
with HyperThreading enabled, but it can work without problem on slower machines.
You must understand that this config is used in testing environment and not in production so you will need to find a way to implement most of those features best possible for your servers.
This simple script will take a picture of a whiteboard and use parts of the ImageMagick library with sane defaults to clean it up tremendously.
The script is here:
#!/bin/bash
convert "$1" -morphology Convolve DoG:15,100,0 -negate -normalize -blur 0x1 -channel RBG -level 60%,91%,0.1 "$2"
# Source http://stackoverflow.com/a/15741856/1301753 | |
import copy | |
import sys | |
import math | |
import pyPdf | |
def split_pages(src, dst): | |
src_f = file(src, 'r+b') | |
dst_f = file(dst, 'w+b') |
Install ImageMagick for image conversion:
brew install imagemagick
Install tesseract for OCR:
brew install tesseract --all-languages
Or install without --all-languages
and install them manually as needed.
I used to use NERD tree for quite a while, then switched to CtrlP for something a little more lightweight. My setup now includes zero file browser or tree view, and instead uses native Vim fuzzy search and auto-directory switching.
There is a super sweet feature in Vim whereby you can fuzzy find your files using **/*
, e.g.:
:vs **/*<partial file name><Tab>
Updated: Just use qutebrowser (and disable javascript). The web is done for.
namespace Analogy | |
{ | |
/// <summary> | |
/// This example shows that a library that needs access to target .NET Standard 1.3 | |
/// can only access APIs available in that .NET Standard. Even though similar the APIs exist on .NET | |
/// Framework 4.5, it implements a version of .NET Standard that isn't compatible with the library. | |
/// </summary>INetCoreApp10 | |
class Example1 | |
{ | |
public void Net45Application(INetFramework45 platform) |
Prereq:
apt-get install zsh
apt-get install git-core
Getting zsh to work in ubuntu is weird, since sh
does not understand the source
command. So, you do this to install zsh
wget https://github.com/robbyrussell/oh-my-zsh/raw/master/tools/install.sh -O - | zsh
Locate the section for your github remote in the .git/config
file. It looks like this:
[remote "origin"]
fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
url = git@github.com:joyent/node.git
Now add the line fetch = +refs/pull/*/head:refs/remotes/origin/pr/*
to this section. Obviously, change the github url to match your project's URL. It ends up looking like this: