start new:
tmux
start new with session name:
tmux new -s myname
Magic words:
psql -U postgres
Some interesting flags (to see all, use -h
or --help
depending on your psql version):
-E
: will describe the underlaying queries of the \
commands (cool for learning!)-l
: psql will list all databases and then exit (useful if the user you connect with doesn't has a default database, like at AWS RDS)(by @andrestaltz)
If you prefer to watch video tutorials with live-coding, then check out this series I recorded with the same contents as in this article: Egghead.io - Introduction to Reactive Programming.
const I = x => x | |
const K = x => y => x | |
const A = f => x => f (x) | |
const T = x => f => f (x) | |
const W = f => x => f (x) (x) | |
const C = f => y => x => f (x) (y) | |
const B = f => g => x => f (g (x)) | |
const S = f => g => x => f (x) (g (x)) | |
const S_ = f => g => x => f (g (x)) (x) | |
const S2 = f => g => h => x => f (g (x)) (h (x)) |
A lot of these are outright stolen from Edward O'Campo-Gooding's list of questions. I really like his list.
I'm having some trouble paring this down to a manageable list of questions -- I realistically want to know all of these things before starting to work at a company, but it's a lot to ask all at once. My current game plan is to pick 6 before an interview and ask those.
I'd love comments and suggestions about any of these.
I've found questions like "do you have smart people? Can I learn a lot at your company?" to be basically totally useless -- everybody will say "yeah, definitely!" and it's hard to learn anything from them. So I'm trying to make all of these questions pretty concrete -- if a team doesn't have an issue tracker, they don't have an issue tracker.
I'm also mostly not asking about principles, but the way things are -- not "do you think code review is important?", but "Does all code get reviewed?".
It's great for beginners. Then it turns into a mess.
Ideas are cheap. Make a prototype, sketch a CLI session, draw a wireframe. Discuss around concrete examples, not hand-waving abstractions. Don't say you did something, provide a URL that proves it.
Nothing is real until it's being used by a real user. This doesn't mean you make a prototype in the morning and blog about it in the evening. It means you find one person you believe your product will help and try to get them to use it.
from urllib.request import Request, urlopen | |
from urllib import parse | |
import os | |
import time | |
import json | |
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | |
# get environment variables | |
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | |
api_base = os.getenv('DBT_URL', 'https://cloud.getdbt.com/') # default to multitenant url |
This document describes how to set up Windows 10 for cross-platform development (Go, NodeJS, etc) with Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL).
Most of the information here is collected from
This entire guide is based on an old version of Homebrew/Node and no longer applies. It was only ever intended to fix a specific error message which has since been fixed. I've kept it here for historical purposes, but it should no longer be used. Homebrew maintainers have fixed things and the options mentioned don't exist and won't work.
I still believe it is better to manually install npm separately since having a generic package manager maintain another package manager is a bad idea, but the instructions below don't explain how to do that.
Installing node through Homebrew can cause problems with npm for globally installed packages. To fix it quickly, use the solution below. An explanation is also included at the end of this document.