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# # act like GNU screen | |
unbind C-b | |
set -g prefix C-a | |
# Allow C-A a to send C-A to application | |
bind C-a send-prefix | |
# start window index of 1 | |
set -g base-index 1 |
Attention: the list was moved to
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This page is not maintained anymore, please update your bookmarks.
Testing subscript and superscript
Testing subscript subscript level 2
Testing superscript superscript level 2
List of oldest supported version of top 10 Linux Distros and their glibc version according to distrowatch.com.
Out of all versions with published EOLs, 2.12 is the oldest glibc still active, found in CentOS 6.8.
If CentOS 6 and 7 are eliminated, the oldest glibc is 2.23 in Ubuntu and Slackware.
# Keunwoo Choi | |
# This example crawl snoring sound by searching keyword 'snore'. | |
from __future__ import print_function | |
import freesound # $ git clone https://github.com/MTG/freesound-python | |
import os | |
import sys | |
api_key = 'YOUR_API_KEY' | |
folder = 'data_freesound/' # folder to save |
For a brief user-level introduction to CMake, watch C++ Weekly, Episode 78, Intro to CMake by Jason Turner. LLVM’s CMake Primer provides a good high-level introduction to the CMake syntax. Go read it now.
After that, watch Mathieu Ropert’s CppCon 2017 talk Using Modern CMake Patterns to Enforce a Good Modular Design (slides). It provides a thorough explanation of what modern CMake is and why it is so much better than “old school” CMake. The modular design ideas in this talk are based on the book [Large-Scale C++ Software Design](https://www.amazon.de/Large-Scale-Soft
You want to create a series of key-value pairs from the command line, using the argparse library, e.g.:
command par1 par2 --set foo=hello bar="hello world" baz=5
This is typically useful when you want to clearly distinguish":
Given that LibriVox contains enough of english content for a speech processing corpus, LibriSpeech, to be built from it, I've wondered how much content LibriVox has in languages other than English.
I've downloaded the JSON API contents of Librivox, separated the audiobooks according to their language, and summed up their lengths, obtaining a language breakdown expressed in spoken time.
This gave results of over 60 thousand hours for english, thousands of hours each for German, Dutch, French, Spanish, and hundreds of hours for other languages.