import React from 'react'; | |
const ConditionalWrap = ({condition, wrap, children}) => condition ? wrap(children) : children; | |
const Header = ({shouldLinkToHome}) => ( | |
<div> | |
<ConditionalWrap | |
condition={shouldLinkToHome} | |
wrap={children => <a href="/">{children}</a>} | |
> |
Disclaimer: This piece is written anonymously. The names of a few particular companies are mentioned, but as common examples only.
This is a short write-up on things that I wish I'd known and considered before joining a private company (aka startup, aka unicorn in some cases). I'm not trying to make the case that you should never join a private company, but the power imbalance between founder and employee is extreme, and that potential candidates would
This a collection of interesting links found in The Imposter's Handbook by Rob Conery.
Content:
This describes how I setup Atom for an ideal Clojure development workflow. This fixes indentation on newlines, handles parentheses, etc. The keybinding settings for enter (in keymap.cson) are important to get proper newlines with indentation at the right level. There are other helpers in init.coffee and keymap.cson that are useful for cutting, copying, pasting, deleting, and indenting Lisp expressions.
The Atom documentation is excellent. It's highly worth reading the flight manual.
No, seriously, don't. You're probably reading this because you've asked what VPN service to use, and this is the answer.
Note: The content in this post does not apply to using VPN for their intended purpose; that is, as a virtual private (internal) network. It only applies to using it as a glorified proxy, which is what every third-party "VPN provider" does.
- A Russian translation of this article can be found here, contributed by Timur Demin.
- A Turkish translation can be found here, contributed by agyild.
- There's also this article about VPN services, which is honestly better written (and has more cat pictures!) than my article.
Rich Hickey • 3 years ago
Sorry, I have to disagree with the entire premise here.
A wide variety of experiences might lead to well-roundedness, but not to greatness, nor even goodness. By constantly switching from one thing to another you are always reaching above your comfort zone, yes, but doing so by resetting your skill and knowledge level to zero.
Mastery comes from a combination of at least several of the following:
var mediaJSON = { "categories" : [ { "name" : "Movies", | |
"videos" : [ | |
{ "description" : "Big Buck Bunny tells the story of a giant rabbit with a heart bigger than himself. When one sunny day three rodents rudely harass him, something snaps... and the rabbit ain't no bunny anymore! In the typical cartoon tradition he prepares the nasty rodents a comical revenge.\n\nLicensed under the Creative Commons Attribution license\nhttp://www.bigbuckbunny.org", | |
"sources" : [ "http://commondatastorage.googleapis.com/gtv-videos-bucket/sample/BigBuckBunny.mp4" ], | |
"subtitle" : "By Blender Foundation", | |
"thumb" : "images/BigBuckBunny.jpg", | |
"title" : "Big Buck Bunny" | |
}, | |
{ "description" : "The first Blender Open Movie from 2006", | |
"sources" : [ "http://commondatastorage.googleapis.com/gtv-videos-bucket/sample/ElephantsDream.mp4" ], |
var url = 'http://static1.kevincennis.com/sounds/callmemaybe.mp3' | |
, audio = new Audio(url) | |
, context = new webkitAudioContext() | |
// 512 samples per frame, stereo input, mono output | |
, processor = context.createJavaScriptNode(512, 2, 1) | |
, sourceNode | |
audio.addEventListener('canplaythrough', function(){ | |
sourceNode = context.createMediaElementSource(audio) | |
sourceNode.connect(processor) |
Answer by Jim Dennis on Stack Overflow question http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1218390/what-is-your-most-productive-shortcut-with-vim/1220118#1220118
Your problem with Vim is that you don't grok vi.
You mention cutting with yy and complain that you almost never want to cut whole lines. In fact programmers, editing source code, very often want to work on whole lines, ranges of lines and blocks of code. However, yy is only one of many way to yank text into the anonymous copy buffer (or "register" as it's called in vi).
The "Zen" of vi is that you're speaking a language. The initial y is a verb. The statement yy is a simple statement which is, essentially, an abbreviation for 0 y$:
0 go to the beginning of this line. y yank from here (up to where?)