Tested in Mac OS X: super == command
Open/Goto
- super+t: go to file
- super+ctrl+p: go to project
- super+r: go to methods
var util = require('util') | |
function hook_stdout(callback) { | |
var old_write = process.stdout.write | |
process.stdout.write = (function(write) { | |
return function(string, encoding, fd) { | |
write.apply(process.stdout, arguments) | |
callback(string, encoding, fd) | |
} |
# watch a file changes in the current directory, | |
# execute all tests when a file is changed or renamed | |
$watcher = New-Object System.IO.FileSystemWatcher | |
$watcher.Path = get-location | |
$watcher.IncludeSubdirectories = $true | |
$watcher.EnableRaisingEvents = $false | |
$watcher.NotifyFilter = [System.IO.NotifyFilters]::LastWrite -bor [System.IO.NotifyFilters]::FileName | |
while($TRUE){ |
import os | |
import sys | |
import glob | |
import pysam | |
import argparse | |
import multiprocessing | |
def get_args(): | |
'''Parse sys.argv''' | |
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser() |
--- | |
#### | |
#### THIS IS OLD AND OUTDATED | |
#### LIKE, ANSIBLE 1.0 OLD. | |
#### | |
#### PROBABLY HIT UP https://docs.ansible.com MY DUDES | |
#### | |
#### IF IT BREAKS I'M JUST SOME GUY WITH | |
#### A DOG, OK, SORRY | |
#### |
Notes from the Mystery Machine Bus
I've spent the past eight years (starting back in June 2004) writing elaborate rants about a bunch of vaguely related software engineering issues.
I was doing all that ranting because I've been genuinely perplexed by a set of "bizarre" world-views held dear by -- as far as I can tell -- about half of all programmers I encounter, whether online or in person.
Last week, after nearly a decade of hurling myself against this problem, I've finally figured it out. I know exactly what's been bothering me.
In today's essay I'm going to present you with a new conceptual framework for thinking about software engineering. This set of ideas I present will be completely obvious to you. You will probably slap yourself for not having thought of it yourself. Or you might slap the person next to you. In fact you probably have thought of it yourself, because it is so blindingly obvious.
For use on:
https://console.aws.amazon.com/s3/home
Only tested in Chrome.
Installation instructions:
/* | |
* I add this to html files generated with pandoc. | |
*/ | |
html { | |
font-size: 100%; | |
overflow-y: scroll; | |
-webkit-text-size-adjust: 100%; | |
-ms-text-size-adjust: 100%; | |
} |
#!/bin/bash | |
# | |
# Bash script to setup headless Selenium (uses Xvfb and Chrome) | |
# (Tested on Ubuntu 12.04) | |
# Add Google Chrome's repo to sources.list | |
echo "deb http://dl.google.com/linux/chrome/deb/ stable main" | sudo tee -a /etc/apt/sources.list | |
# Install Google's public key used for signing packages (e.g. Chrome) | |
# (Source: http://www.google.com/linuxrepositories/) |
# to generate your dhparam.pem file, run in the terminal | |
openssl dhparam -out /etc/nginx/ssl/dhparam.pem 2048 |