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Krzysztof Sadowski sadowskik

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sadowskik / windows_hardening.cmd
Created May 11, 2020 10:18 — forked from mackwage/windows_hardening.cmd
Script to perform some hardening of Windows OS
:: Windows 10 Hardening Script
:: This is based mostly on my own personal research and testing. My objective is to secure/harden Windows 10 as much as possible while not impacting usability at all. (Think being able to run on this computer's of family members so secure them but not increase the chances of them having to call you to troubleshoot something related to it later on). References for virtually all settings can be found at the bottom. Just before the references section, you will always find several security settings commented out as they could lead to compatibility issues in common consumer setups but they're worth considering.
:: Obligatory 'views are my own'. :)
:: Thank you @jaredhaight for the Win Firewall config recommendations!
:: Thank you @ricardojba for the DLL Safe Order Search reg key!
:: Thank you @jessicaknotts for the help on testing Exploit Guard configs and checking privacy settings!
:: Best script I've found for Debloating Windows 10: https://github.com/Sycnex/Windows10Debloater
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sadowskik / article.org
Created February 8, 2017 11:15 — forked from jpallari/article.org
Enforcing invariants in Scala datatypes

Enforcing invariants in Scala datatypes

Scala provides many tools to help us build programs with less runtime errors. Instead of relying on nulls, the recommended practice is to use the Option type. Instead of throwing exceptions, Try and Either types are used for representing potential error scenarios. What’s common with these features is that they’re used for capturing runtime features in the type system, thus lifting the runtime scenario handling to the compilation phase: your program doesn’t compile until you’ve explicitly handled nulls, exceptions, and other runtime features in your code.

In his “Strategic Scala Style” blog post series,

Advanced Functional Programming with Scala - Notes

Copyright © 2017 Fantasyland Institute of Learning. All rights reserved.

1. Mastering Functions

A function is a mapping from one set, called a domain, to another set, called the codomain. A function associates every element in the domain with exactly one element in the codomain. In Scala, both domain and codomain are types.

val square : Int => Int = x => x * x