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@clintel
clintel / gist:1155906
Created August 19, 2011 02:40
Fenced code in bullet lists with GitHub-flavoured MarkDown??

Fenced code blocks inside ordered and unordered lists

  1. This is a numbered list.

  2. I'm going to include a fenced code block as part of this bullet:

    Code
    More Code
    
@olivierlacan
olivierlacan / launch_sublime_from_terminal.markdown
Created September 5, 2011 15:50
Launch Sublime Text 2 from the Mac OS X Terminal

Launch Sublime Text 2 from the Mac OS X Terminal

Sublime Text 2 ships with a CLI called subl (why not "sublime", go figure). This utility is hidden in the following folder (assuming you installed Sublime in /Applications like normal folk. If this following line opens Sublime Text for you, then bingo, you're ready.

open /Applications/Sublime\ Text\ 2.app/Contents/SharedSupport/bin/subl

You can find more (official) details about subl here: http://www.sublimetext.com/docs/2/osx_command_line.html

Installation

@kevinSuttle
kevinSuttle / meta-tags.md
Last active July 10, 2024 09:39 — forked from lancejpollard/meta-tags.md
List of Usable HTML Meta and Link Tags
@cobyism
cobyism / gh-pages-deploy.md
Last active July 18, 2024 05:22
Deploy to `gh-pages` from a `dist` folder on the master branch. Useful for use with [yeoman](http://yeoman.io).

Deploying a subfolder to GitHub Pages

Sometimes you want to have a subdirectory on the master branch be the root directory of a repository’s gh-pages branch. This is useful for things like sites developed with Yeoman, or if you have a Jekyll site contained in the master branch alongside the rest of your code.

For the sake of this example, let’s pretend the subfolder containing your site is named dist.

Step 1

Remove the dist directory from the project’s .gitignore file (it’s ignored by default by Yeoman).

@plentz
plentz / nginx.conf
Last active July 22, 2024 11:19
Best nginx configuration for improved security(and performance)
# to generate your dhparam.pem file, run in the terminal
openssl dhparam -out /etc/nginx/ssl/dhparam.pem 2048
@koudelka
koudelka / gist:f4d07b9d998d723e55a0
Created June 6, 2014 20:52
Possible http status codes module for Elixir Phoenix Web Framework
#
# Would this be useful to Phoenix?
#
# In controllers, it'd be nice to be able to refer to status codes as atoms instead of integers.
#
defmodule Phoenix.Controller.StatusCodes do
@http_status_codes %{
@kristopherjohnson
kristopherjohnson / pipe-forward.swift
Last active March 29, 2024 19:44
Swift: define F#-style pipe-forward (|>) operator that evaluates from left to right.
// F#'s "pipe-forward" |> operator
//
// Also "Optional-chaining" operators |>! and |>&
//
// And adapters for standard library map/filter/sorted
infix operator |> { precedence 50 associativity left }
infix operator |>! { precedence 50 associativity left }
infix operator |>& { precedence 50 associativity left }
infix operator |>* { precedence 50 associativity left }
@denji
denji / golang-tls.md
Last active July 1, 2024 05:41 — forked from spikebike/client.go
Simple Golang HTTPS/TLS Examples

Moved to git repository: https://github.com/denji/golang-tls

Generate private key (.key)
# Key considerations for algorithm "RSA" ≥ 2048-bit
openssl genrsa -out server.key 2048

# Key considerations for algorithm "ECDSA" ≥ secp384r1
# List ECDSA the supported curves (openssl ecparam -list_curves)
class ArrayImpl<T> {
var space: Int
var count: Int
var ptr: UnsafeMutablePointer<T>
init(count: Int = 0, ptr: UnsafeMutablePointer<T> = nil) {
self.count = count
self.space = count
@chantastic
chantastic / on-jsx.markdown
Last active May 30, 2024 13:11
JSX, a year in

Hi Nicholas,

I saw you tweet about JSX yesterday. It seemed like the discussion devolved pretty quickly but I wanted to share our experience over the last year. I understand your concerns. I've made similar remarks about JSX. When we started using it Planning Center, I led the charge to write React without it. I don't imagine I'd have much to say that you haven't considered but, if it's helpful, here's a pattern that changed my opinion:

The idea that "React is the V in MVC" is disingenuous. It's a good pitch but, for many of us, it feels like in invitation to repeat our history of coupled views. In practice, React is the V and the C. Dan Abramov describes the division as Smart and Dumb Components. At our office, we call them stateless and container components (view-controllers if we're Flux). The idea is pretty simple: components can't