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@branneman
branneman / better-nodejs-require-paths.md
Last active June 29, 2024 16:00
Better local require() paths for Node.js

Better local require() paths for Node.js

Problem

When the directory structure of your Node.js application (not library!) has some depth, you end up with a lot of annoying relative paths in your require calls like:

const Article = require('../../../../app/models/article');

Those suck for maintenance and they're ugly.

Possible solutions

with table_stats as (
select psut.relname,
psut.n_live_tup,
1.0 * psut.idx_scan / greatest(1, psut.seq_scan + psut.idx_scan) as index_use_ratio
from pg_stat_user_tables psut
order by psut.n_live_tup desc
),
table_io as (
select psiut.relname,
sum(psiut.heap_blks_read) as table_page_read,
@andreicristianpetcu
andreicristianpetcu / ansible-summary.md
Created May 30, 2016 19:25
This is an ANSIBLE Cheat Sheet from Jon Warbrick

An Ansible summary

Jon Warbrick, July 2014, V3.2 (for Ansible 1.7)

Configuration file

intro_configuration.html

First one found from of

@peterhurford
peterhurford / pytest-fixture-modularization.md
Created July 28, 2016 15:48
How to modularize your py.test fixtures

Using py.test is great and the support for test fixtures is pretty awesome. However, in order to share your fixtures across your entire module, py.test suggests you define all your fixtures within one single conftest.py file. This is impractical if you have a large quantity of fixtures -- for better organization and readibility, you would much rather define your fixtures across multiple, well-named files. But how do you do that? ...No one on the internet seemed to know.

Turns out, however, you can define fixtures in individual files like this:

tests/fixtures/add.py

import pytest

@pytest.fixture