This is an example of using a Collection view with Backbone.
package sample.akka.testkit | |
import akka.actor.ActorSystem | |
import akka.actor.Actor | |
import akka.testkit.{TestKit, TestActorRef} | |
import org.scalatest.matchers.MustMatchers | |
import org.scalatest.WordSpec | |
class ImplicitSenderTest extends TestKit(ActorSystem("testSystem")) | |
// Using the ImplicitSender trait will automatically set `testActor` as the sender |
Source: https://g751jy.wordpress.com/about/parrot-zik-bluetooth-headset/ | |
https://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=194006 | |
Cached: http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:4stTobIXSD0J:https://g751jy.wordpress.com/about/parrot-zik-bluetooth-headset/+&cd=3&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=us | |
Bug and possible solution: actually I found a bug in that make the headset unusable, it seems that the pulse audio module: module-bluetooth-discover works only if started after the X11 session is up. So I have a workaround. | |
Edit the file: | |
/etc/pulse/default.pa |
# Install | |
# via http://askubuntu.com/questions/510056/how-to-install-google-chrome | |
wget -q -O - https://dl-ssl.google.com/linux/linux_signing_key.pub | sudo apt-key add - | |
sudo sh -c 'echo "deb http://dl.google.com/linux/chrome/deb/ stable main" >> /etc/apt/sources.list.d/google-chrome.list' | |
sudo apt-get update | |
sudo apt-get install google-chrome-stable | |
# Update |
# | |
# CORS header support | |
# | |
# One way to use this is by placing it into a file called "cors_support" | |
# under your Nginx configuration directory and placing the following | |
# statement inside your **location** block(s): | |
# | |
# include cors_support; | |
# | |
# As of Nginx 1.7.5, add_header supports an "always" parameter which |
/*! | |
* Small Walker - v0.1.1 - 5/5/2011 | |
* http://benalman.com/ | |
* | |
* Copyright (c) 2011 "Cowboy" Ben Alman | |
* Dual licensed under the MIT and GPL licenses. | |
* http://benalman.com/about/license/ | |
*/ | |
// Walk the DOM, depth-first (HTML order). Inside the callback, `this` is the |
(This gist is pretty old; I've written up my current approach to the Pyramid integration on this blog post, but that blog post doesn't go into the transactional management, so you may still find this useful.)
I've created a Pyramid scaffold which integrates Alembic, a migration tool, with the standard SQLAlchemy scaffold. (It also configures the Mako template system, because I prefer Mako.)
I am also using PostgreSQL for my database. PostgreSQL supports nested transactions. This means I can setup the tables at the beginning of the test session, then start a transaction before each test happens and roll it back after the test; in turn, this means my tests operate in the same environment I expect to use in production, but they are also fast.
I based my approach on [sontek's blog post](http://sontek.net/blog/
Let's have some command-line fun with curl, [jq][1], and the [new GitHub Search API][2].
Today we're looking for: