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Jaeho Lee (Jay) sairion

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Real iOS Apps in AppStore, with source on GitHub:

thanks 4 putting source for a noob to learn a little

I've used these:

// Original method
var object = {
method: function (x, y) {
return x+y;
}
}
// Add operations before or after!
object.method = (function (original) {
return function (x, y) {

#Techniques for Anti-Aliasing @font-face on Windows

It all started with an email from a client: Do these fonts look funky to you? The title is prickly.

The font in question was Port Lligat Sans from Google Web Fonts.

The "prickly" is aliasing caused by lack of hinting

@sairion
sairion / easing.js
Created January 22, 2014 08:18 — forked from gre/easing.js
/*
* Easing Functions - inspired from http://gizma.com/easing/
* only considering the t value for the range [0, 1] => [0, 1]
*/
EasingFunctions = {
// no easing, no acceleration
linear: function (t) { return t },
// accelerating from zero velocity
easeInQuad: function (t) { return t*t },
// decelerating to zero velocity
@sairion
sairion / jquery.js
Created February 3, 2014 04:54 — forked from rwaldron/jquery.js
/*!
* jQuery JavaScript Library v2.1.1pre
* http://jquery.com/
*
* Includes Sizzle.js
* http://sizzlejs.com/
*
* Copyright 2005, 2014 jQuery Foundation, Inc. and other contributors
* Released under the MIT license
* http://jquery.org/license

I'm having trouble understanding the benefit of require.js. Can you help me out? I imagine other developers have a similar interest.

From Require.js - Why AMD:

The AMD format comes from wanting a module format that was better than today's "write a bunch of script tags with implicit dependencies that you have to manually order"

I don't quite understand why this methodology is so bad. The difficult part is that you have to manually order dependencies. But the benefit is that you don't have an additional layer of abstraction.


import uuid
from flask import current_app, request, jsonify, abort
from flask.ext.sqlalchemy import SQLAlchemy
from sqlalchemy import not_
from sqlalchemy.dialects.postgresql import UUID
db = SQLAlchemy(current_app)
/*global module:false*/
module.exports = function(grunt) {
// Project configuration.
grunt.initConfig({
// Metadata.
pkg: grunt.file.readJSON('package.json'),
aws: grunt.file.readJSON('config/grunt-aws.json'),
datetime: Date.now(),
jshint: {
@sairion
sairion / The Technical Interview Cheat Sheet.md
Last active August 29, 2015 14:27 — forked from tsiege/The Technical Interview Cheat Sheet.md
This is my technical interview cheat sheet. Feel free to fork it or do whatever you want with it. PLEASE let me know if there are any errors or if anything crucial is missing. I will add more links soon.

Studying for a Tech Interview Sucks, so Here's a Cheat Sheet to Help

This list is meant to be a both a quick guide and reference for further research into these topics. It's basically a summary of that comp sci course you never took or forgot about, so there's no way it can cover everything in depth. It also will be available as a gist on Github for everyone to edit and add to.

Data Structure Basics

###Array ####Definition:

  • Stores data elements based on an sequential, most commonly 0 based, index.
  • Based on tuples from set theory.
@sairion
sairion / git-rsync.sh
Created October 12, 2015 09:56 — forked from paydro/git-rsync.sh
rsync changed files in a git repo to a remote server
git status -s | awk '{print $2}' | sed 's/\(.*\)/rsync -cav \1 user@remote.server.com:~\/\1/' | sh