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Matt Hayes mysterycommand

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I am the owner of lvh.me. And I'm glad to hear it's helpful. In truth, it's just a fancy DNS trick. lhv.me and all of it's sub-domains just point back to your computer (127.0.0.1). That means running ssl is as simple (or difficult) as running ssl on your computer.
I'm not sure how comfortable you are with the command line, but here's my how I setup my development environment. (rvm, passenger, nginx w/ SSL, etc).
# Install rvm (no sudo!)
# ------------------------------------------------------
bash < <( curl http://rvm.beginrescueend.com/releases/rvm-install-head )
source ~/.rvm/scripts/rvm
rvm install ree-1.8.7-2010.02
@showell
showell / scoping.coffee
Created December 22, 2011 22:20
scoping in CoffeeScript
# This code demonstrates how CS scoping works within a file. Scroll down to the end to
# see how cross-file scoping works.
# Here are the rules.
#
# Scoping is all lexical. Read the file from top to bottom to determine variable scopes.
#
# 1) When you encounter any variable in the top-level nesting, its scope is top level.
# 2) Inside a function, if you encounter a variable name that still exists in an outer scope, then that
# variable name refers to the variable in the outer scope. (This is "closure".)
@josevalim
josevalim / 0_README.md
Created September 13, 2012 21:52
Sinatra like routes in Rails controllers

Sinatra like routes in Rails controllers

A proof of concept of having Sinatra like routes inside your controllers.

How to use

Since the router is gone, feel free to remove config/routes.rb. Then add the file below to lib/action_controller/inline_routes.rb inside your app.

@jareware
jareware / SCSS.md
Last active July 1, 2024 09:25
Advanced SCSS, or, 16 cool things you may not have known your stylesheets could do

⇐ back to the gist-blog at jrw.fi

Advanced SCSS

Or, 16 cool things you may not have known your stylesheets could do. I'd rather have kept it to a nice round number like 10, but they just kept coming. Sorry.

I've been using SCSS/SASS for most of my styling work since 2009, and I'm a huge fan of Compass (by the great @chriseppstein). It really helped many of us through the darkest cross-browser crap. Even though browsers are increasingly playing nice with CSS, another problem has become very topical: managing the complexity in stylesheets as our in-browser apps get larger and larger. SCSS is an indispensable tool for dealing with this.

This isn't an introduction to the language by a long shot; many things probably won't make sense unless you have some SCSS under your belt already. That said, if you're not yet comfy with the basics, check out the aweso

@rwaldron
rwaldron / emitter.js
Last active December 15, 2015 07:39
Simple Event Emitter class that uses a Symbol for event binding storage
// In Chrome Canary, with Experimental JavaScript enabled...
(function( exports ) {
// Create a reusable symbol for storing
// Emitter instance events
var sym = new Symbol();
function Emitter() {
this[ sym ] = {
@rwaldron
rwaldron / response.md
Last active December 15, 2015 14:28
This is in response to Peter van der Zee's blog post, http://qfox.nl/weblog/282

Peter van der Zee published this post on his personal blog and it was featured in this week's edition of JavaScript Weekly. The following sections each contain a piece of code copied directly from his post, followed by an irrefutable explanation of why it is either wrong or misleading.

EDIT, April 1, 2013: I've removed any harsh language, but the content and corrections remain the same.

These are facts.

Computed properties...

Virtual DOM and diffing algorithm

There was a [great article][1] about how react implements it's virtual DOM. There are some really interesting ideas in there but they are deeply buried in the implementation of the React framework.

However, it's possible to implement just the virtual DOM and diff algorithm on it's own as a set of independent modules.

@patriciogonzalezvivo
patriciogonzalezvivo / GLSL-Math.md
Last active April 15, 2024 20:34
GLSL Math functions

Trigonometry

const float PI = 3.1415926535897932384626433832795;
const float PI_2 = 1.57079632679489661923;
const float PI_4 = 0.785398163397448309616;

float PHI = (1.0+sqrtf(5.0))/2.0;
@mathisonian
mathisonian / index.md
Last active March 22, 2023 05:31
requiring npm modules in the browser console

demo gif

The final result: require() any module on npm in your browser console with browserify

This article is written to explain how the above gif works in the chrome (and other) browser consoles. A quick disclaimer: this whole thing is a huge hack, it shouldn't be used for anything seriously, and there are probably much better ways of accomplishing the same.

Update: There are much better ways of accomplishing the same, and the script has been updated to use a much simpler method pulling directly from browserify-cdn. See this thread for details: mathisonian/requirify#5

inspiration

Disclaimer: This is an unofficial post by a random person from the community. I am not an official representative of io.js. Want to ask a question? open an issue on the node-forward discussions repo

io.js - what you need to know

io-logo-substack

  • io is a fork of node v0.12 (the next stable version of node.js, currently unreleased)
  • io.js will be totally compatible with node.js
  • the people who created io.js are node core contributors who have different ideas on how to run the project
  • it is not a zero-sum game. many core contributors will help maintain both node.js and io.js