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@PurpleBooth
PurpleBooth / README.md
Last active September 8, 2023 20:52
A github workflow pipeline for rust that does test, build and deploy windows, linux and mac, creates releases, and does SemVer Versioning, and releases to a homebrew tap

Features

  • Automatically bump SemVer
  • Update a personal homebrew tap
  • Keep that pesky version in the Cargo.toml up to date
  • (From dependabot) Get new versions out as soon as possible

Assumptions

  • You don't want a changelog
@ilessing
ilessing / Pandoc Markdown to PDF.md
Last active June 14, 2024 22:42
getting pandoc to generate PDF from Markdown on MacOS

Using Pandoc to generate PDFs from Markdown

on a Mac running macOS 10.13.4

To install the needed components you can use Homebrew

Two Components are needed:

@gbaman
gbaman / graphql_example.py
Created November 1, 2017 00:18
An example on using the Github GraphQL API with Python 3
# An example to get the remaining rate limit using the Github GraphQL API.
import requests
headers = {"Authorization": "Bearer YOUR API KEY"}
def run_query(query): # A simple function to use requests.post to make the API call. Note the json= section.
request = requests.post('https://api.github.com/graphql', json={'query': query}, headers=headers)
if request.status_code == 200:
@BaseCase
BaseCase / dc_2017_biblio.md
Last active January 23, 2020 05:13
List of resources recommended or mentioned by the speakers at Deconstruct 2017

Deconstruct 2017 Bibliography

Here are all of the resources mentioned by Deconstruct 2017 speakers, along with who recommended what. Please post a comment if I missed something or have an error!

DC 2017 Speakers' Choice Gold Medalist

  • Seeing Like a State by James Scott

Books

  • Public Opinion by Walter Lippmann (Evan Czaplicki)
  • A Pattern Language by Christopher Alexander (Brian Marick)
  • Domain Driven Design by Eric Evans (Brian Marick)
@bvis
bvis / README.md
Last active April 12, 2024 04:21
Docker Env Vars expanded with secrets content

Variables by Secrets

Sample script that allows you to define as environment variables the name of the docker secret that contains the secret value. It will be in charge of analyze all the environment variables searching for the placeholder to substitute the variable value by the secret.

Usage

You can define the next environment variables:

@denji
denji / README.md
Last active May 16, 2024 10:38 — forked from Cubixmeister/README.md
Simple Sentry docker-compose.yml
  1. Download docker-compose.yml to dir named sentry
  2. Change SENTRY_SECRET_KEY to random 32 char string
  3. Run docker-compose up -d
  4. Run docker-compose exec sentry sentry upgrade to setup database and create admin user
  5. (Optional) Run docker-compose exec sentry pip install sentry-slack if you want slack plugin, it can be done later
  6. Run docker-compose restart sentry
  7. Sentry is now running on public port 9000
@awesomebytes
awesomebytes / simple_debian_repository.md
Last active June 4, 2024 14:34
How to create a simple debian repository with minimal dependences

Simple debian repository

How to have a simple debian repository to offer your packages.

Requirements

You probably have them already installed

  • Python (I used 2.7).
  • dpkg-scanpackages: sudo apt-get install dpkg-dev
  • gzip: sudo apt-get install gzip

This document has moved!

It's now here, in The Programmer's Compendium. The content is the same as before, but being part of the compendium means that it's actively maintained.

@bpierre
bpierre / README.md
Last active February 15, 2024 18:40
Switch To Vim For Good

Switch To Vim For Good

NOTE: This guide has moved to https://github.com/bpierre/switch-to-vim-for-good

This guide is coming from an email I used to send to newcomers to Vim. It is not intended to be a complete guide, it is about how I switched myself.

My decision to switch to Vim has been made a long time ago. Coming from TextMate 1, I wanted to learn an editor that is Open Source (so I don’t lose my time learning a tool that can be killed), cross platform (so I can use it everywhere), and powerful enough (so I won’t regret TextMate). For these reasons, Vim has always been the editor I wanted to learn, but it took me several years before I did it in a way that works for me. I tried to switch progressively, using the Janus Vim distribution for a few months, then got back to using TextMate 2 for a time, waiting for the next attempt… here is what finally worked for me.

Original gist with comments: https://gist.github.com/bpierre/0a0025d348b6001394e0