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artero / launch_sublime_from_terminal.markdown
Last active May 15, 2024 03:38 — forked from olivierlacan/launch_sublime_from_terminal.markdown
Launch Sublime Text 2 from the Mac OS X Terminal

Launch Sublime Text 2 from the Mac OS X Terminal

Sublime Text 2 ships with a CLI called subl (why not "sublime", go figure). This utility is hidden in the following folder (assuming you installed Sublime in /Applications like normal folk. If this following line opens Sublime Text for you, then bingo, you're ready.

open /Applications/Sublime\ Text\ 2.app/Contents/SharedSupport/bin/subl

You can find more (official) details about subl here: http://www.sublimetext.com/docs/2/osx_command_line.html

Installation

@Manouchehri
Manouchehri / rfc3161.txt
Last active July 7, 2024 10:55
List of free rfc3161 servers.
https://rfc3161.ai.moda
https://rfc3161.ai.moda/adobe
https://rfc3161.ai.moda/microsoft
https://rfc3161.ai.moda/apple
https://rfc3161.ai.moda/any
http://rfc3161.ai.moda
http://timestamp.digicert.com
http://timestamp.globalsign.com/tsa/r6advanced1
http://rfc3161timestamp.globalsign.com/advanced
http://timestamp.sectigo.com
@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
@wronk
wronk / python_environment_setup.md
Last active July 5, 2024 15:08
Setting up your python development environment (with pyenv, virtualenv, and virtualenvwrapper)

Overview of Python Virtual Environments

This guide is targetted at intermediate or expert users who want low-level control over their Python environments.

When you're working on multiple coding projects, you might want a couple different version of Python and/or modules installed. This helps keep each workflow in its own sandbox instead of trying to juggle multiple projects (each with different dependencies) on your system's version of Python. The guide here covers one way to handle multiple Python versions and Python environments on your own (i.e., without a package manager like conda). See the Using the workflow section to view the end result.


h/t @sharkinsspatial for linking me to the perfect cartoon

/* So how does this work?
I'm using ANSI escape sequences to control the behavior of the terminal while
cat is outputting the text. I deliberately place these control sequences inside
comments so the C++ compiler doesn't try to treat them as code.*/
//
/*The commands in the fake code comment move the cursor to the left edge and
clear out the line, allowing the fake code to take the place of the real code.
And this explanation uses similar commands to wipe itself out too. */
//
#include <cstdio>