I hereby claim:
- I am tommasoturchi on github.
- I am tommasoturchi (https://keybase.io/tommasoturchi) on keybase.
- I have a public key whose fingerprint is DCC1 222E ED6B 5D4F 1118 7CE6 E63C F1E5 7B2D B276
To claim this, I am signing this object:
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*- | |
#!/usr/bin/env python | |
import csv | |
import webbrowser | |
import sys | |
import urllib | |
if len(sys.argv)>1: | |
with open("kindle.csv", "r") as f: |
import { | |
Mesh, | |
IcosahedronGeometry, | |
MeshBasicMaterial | |
} from 'three'; | |
import { | |
MeshComponent, | |
DynamicGeometryModule, | |
Sphere |
I hereby claim:
To claim this, I am signing this object:
from selenium import webdriver | |
from selenium.webdriver.common.by import By | |
import json | |
import subprocess | |
import time | |
driver = webdriver.Chrome() | |
driver.get("https://...") | |
input("Press Enter to continue...") |
Goals: Add links that are reasonable and good explanations of how stuff works. No hype and no vendor content if possible. Practical first-hand accounts and experience preferred (super rare at this point).
If you, like me, resent every dollar spent on commercial PDF tools,
you might want to know how to change the text content of a PDF without
having to pay for Adobe Acrobat or another PDF tool. I didn't see an
obvious open-source tool that lets you dig into PDF internals, but I
did discover a few useful facts about how PDFs are structured that
I think may prove useful to others (or myself) in the future. They
are recorded here. They are surely not universally applicable --
the PDF standard is truly Byzantine -- but they worked for my case.