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@ewheeler
ewheeler / gist:1262989
Created October 4, 2011 22:12
flask + tornado + nginx + supervisord
# create stub, then run flask app in tornado on port 5000 (perhaps with supervisord config below http://supervisord.org/index.html)
#!/usr/bin/env python
from tornado.wsgi import WSGIContainer
from tornado.httpserver import HTTPServer
from tornado.ioloop import IOLoop
from myflaskapp import app
http_server = HTTPServer(WSGIContainer(app))
@benjamincharity
benjamincharity / gitGrepDirectory.bash
Created February 26, 2016 16:19
Git grep within a specific sub-directory.
# Search for `analytics` only inside `./src/app`
git grep analytics -- "./src/app/*"
@dan-blanchard
dan-blanchard / .1.miniconda.md
Last active December 11, 2019 22:38
Quicker Travis builds that rely on numpy and scipy using Miniconda

For ETS's SKLL project, we found out the hard way that Travis-CI's support for numpy and scipy is pretty abysmal. There are pre-installed versions of numpy for some versions of Python, but those are seriously out of date, and scipy is not there are at all. The two most popular approaches for working around this are to (1) build everything from scratch, or (2) use apt-get to install more recent (but still out of date) versions of numpy and scipy. Both of these approaches lead to longer build times, and with the second approach, you still don't have the most recent versions of anything. To circumvent these issues, we've switched to using Miniconda (Anaconda's lightweight cousin) to install everything.

A template for installing a simple Python package that relies on numpy and scipy using Miniconda is provided below. Since it's a common s

@ZacSweers
ZacSweers / FacebookGroupLikesCounter.py
Last active July 26, 2021 13:27
Python code for getting like stats from posts in a Facebook group
from Queue import Queue # Threadsafe queue for threads to use
from collections import Counter # To count stuff for us
import datetime # Because datetime printing is hard
from pprint import pprint
import time # Should be obvious
import subprocess # Used to send notifications on mac
import sys # Get system info
import threading # Should be obvious
import json # Also obvious

Moved

Now located at https://github.com/JeffPaine/beautiful_idiomatic_python.

Why it was moved

Github gists don't support Pull Requests or any notifications, which made it impossible for me to maintain this (surprisingly popular) gist with fixes, respond to comments and so on. In the interest of maintaining the quality of this resource for others, I've moved it to a proper repo. Cheers!

@doobeh
doobeh / example.html
Last active June 8, 2023 18:09
Checkbox WTForms Example (in Flask)
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
<meta charset="UTF-8">
<title>Title</title>
</head>
<body>
<form method="post">
{{ form.hidden_tag() }}
{{ form.example }}
@wybiral
wybiral / noscript-tracking.go
Last active September 11, 2023 08:53
Tracking cursor position in real-time with remote monitoring (without JavaScript)
// Tracking cursor position in real-time without JavaScript
// Demo: https://twitter.com/davywtf/status/1124146339259002881
package main
import (
"fmt"
"net/http"
"strings"
)
@phillipi
phillipi / biggan_slerp
Last active October 8, 2023 01:25
Slerp through the BigGAN latent space
# to be used in conjunction with the functions defined here:
# https://colab.research.google.com/github/tensorflow/hub/blob/master/examples/colab/biggan_generation_with_tf_hub.ipynb
# party parrot transformation
noise_seed_A = 3 # right facing
noise_seed_B = 31 # left facing
num_interps = 14
truncation = 0.2
category = 14
@tommmyy
tommmyy / ramdaDebounce.js
Last active October 19, 2023 15:14
Debounce function using Ramda.js
import { curry, apply } from 'ramda';
/**
* Debounce
*
* @param {Boolean} immediate If true run `fn` at the start of the timeout
* @param timeMs {Number} Debounce timeout
* @param fn {Function} Function to debounce
*
* @return {Number} timeout
@rachelmyers
rachelmyers / Chromebook_setup.md
Last active October 25, 2023 10:00
How I set up my Chromebooks' dev environment

Chromebook Setup Options

Option 1: Stay in Chrome OS

If you're writing bare-bones javascript for the browser, creating Chrome Apps and Extensions, or using remote coding apps like cloud9, Koding, or Nitrous, you may not need to install Ubuntu. Some tutorials can be done entirely within the browser. The tradeoff is that you won't have a full-featured command line, and you may hit a point where you can't install something that you need.

To start coding within Chrome OS, install Text or Caret as a text editor. (Text stores files in Google Docs and Caret stores the files locally on your machine, which may help you choose.) After that, you're good to go, since Chromebooks come with a browser installed.

Optio