Skip to content

Instantly share code, notes, and snippets.

View tncowart's full-sized avatar

Thomas Cowart tncowart

View GitHub Profile
@kastiglione
kastiglione / helpers.swift
Last active June 2, 2022 02:02
Swift helpers, and the lldb setup to use them. Presented @ SLUG https://speakerdeck.com/kastiglione/advanced-debugging-and-swift
extension UIView {
/// Example: call someView.nudge(0, 30)
func nudge(_ dx: CGFloat, _ dy: CGFloat) {
self.frame = self.frame.offsetBy(dx: dx, dy: dy)
CATransaction.flush()
}
}
extension UIView {
/// Example: po UIView.root
@kylemanna
kylemanna / price.txt
Created November 30, 2016 17:16
AWS Lightsail vs DigitalOcean, VULTR and Linode
Price breakdown vs DigitalOcean, Vultr and Linode:
RAM / CPU Cores / STORAGE / Transfer
$5/mo
LightSail: 512MB, 1, 20GB SSD, 1TB
DO: 512MB, 1, 20GB SSD, 1TB
VULTR: 768MB, 1, 15GB SSD, 1TB
$10/mo
@andymatuschak
andymatuschak / States-v3.md
Last active May 1, 2024 12:32
A composable pattern for pure state machines with effects (draft v3)

A composable pattern for pure state machines with effects

State machines are everywhere in interactive systems, but they're rarely defined clearly and explicitly. Given some big blob of code including implicit state machines, which transitions are possible and under what conditions? What effects take place on what transitions?

There are existing design patterns for state machines, but all the patterns I've seen complect side effects with the structure of the state machine itself. Instances of these patterns are difficult to test without mocking, and they end up with more dependencies. Worse, the classic patterns compose poorly: hierarchical state machines are typically not straightforward extensions. The functional programming world has solutions, but they don't transpose neatly enough to be broadly usable in mainstream languages.

Here I present a composable pattern for pure state machiness with effects,

@MohamedAlaa
MohamedAlaa / tmux-cheatsheet.markdown
Last active May 22, 2024 04:43
tmux shortcuts & cheatsheet

tmux shortcuts & cheatsheet

start new:

tmux

start new with session name:

tmux new -s myname