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@joecliff
joecliff / cryptojs_base64_encrypt_decrypt.js
Last active March 11, 2024 08:00
An example of base64 usage in cryptojs
var CryptoJS = require("crypto-js");//replace thie with script tag in browser env
//encrypt
var rawStr = "hello world!";
var wordArray = CryptoJS.enc.Utf8.parse(rawStr);
var base64 = CryptoJS.enc.Base64.stringify(wordArray);
console.log('encrypted:', base64);
//decrypt
var parsedWordArray = CryptoJS.enc.Base64.parse(base64);
@subfuzion
subfuzion / global-gitignore.md
Last active July 16, 2024 18:54
Global gitignore

There are certain files created by particular editors, IDEs, operating systems, etc., that do not belong in a repository. But adding system-specific files to the repo's .gitignore is considered a poor practice. This file should only exclude files and directories that are a part of the package that should not be versioned (such as the node_modules directory) as well as files that are generated (and regenerated) as artifacts of a build process.

All other files should be in your own global gitignore file:

  • Create a file called .gitignore in your home directory and add any filepath patterns you want to ignore.
  • Tell git where your global gitignore file is.

Note: The specific name and path you choose aren't important as long as you configure git to find it, as shown below. You could substitute .config/git/ignore for .gitignore in your home directory, if you prefer.

@iamralch
iamralch / compress.go
Last active April 16, 2023 03:04
ZIP archives in Golang
import (
"archive/zip"
"io"
"os"
"path/filepath"
"strings"
)
func zipit(source, target string) error {
zipfile, err := os.Create(target)
@briandk
briandk / CONTRIBUTING.md
Created March 18, 2016 20:29
A basic template for contributing guidelines that I adapted from Facebook's open source guidelines

Contributing to Transcriptase

We love your input! We want to make contributing to this project as easy and transparent as possible, whether it's:

  • Reporting a bug
  • Discussing the current state of the code
  • Submitting a fix
  • Proposing new features
  • Becoming a maintainer

We Develop with Github

@montanaflynn
montanaflynn / CONCURRENCY.md
Last active June 28, 2024 12:00
Examples of sequential, concurrent and parallel requests in node.js

Concurrency in JavaScript

Javascript is a programming language with a peculiar twist. Its event driven model means that nothing blocks and everything runs concurrently. This is not to be confused with the same type of concurrency as running in parallel on multiple cores. Javascript is single threaded so each program runs on a single core yet every line of code executes without waiting for anything to return. This sounds weird but it's true. If you want to have any type of sequential ordering you can use events, callbacks, or as of late promises.