Naming things in programming is pretty hard. It's not impossible, though. Here are some guidelines I usually follow.
Wikipedia's article about weasel words is incredible. In this context I mean words like this:
- Data
- Process
- Run
- Do
| package main | |
| import ( | |
| "crypto/rand" | |
| "encoding/base64" | |
| "fmt" | |
| "io" | |
| "math/big" | |
| ) |
Naming things in programming is pretty hard. It's not impossible, though. Here are some guidelines I usually follow.
Wikipedia's article about weasel words is incredible. In this context I mean words like this:
| DO WHAT THE FUCK YOU WANT TO PUBLIC LICENSE | |
| Version 2, December 2004 | |
| Copyright (C) 2011 YOUR_NAME_HERE <YOUR_URL_HERE> | |
| Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim or modified | |
| copies of this license document, and changing it is allowed as long | |
| as the name is changed. | |
| DO WHAT THE FUCK YOU WANT TO PUBLIC LICENSE |
| #!/bin/bash | |
| # Copyright © 2017 Google Inc. | |
| # Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); | |
| # you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. | |
| # You may obtain a copy of the License at | |
| # | |
| # http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 | |
| # | |
| # Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software |
Github Actions is a CI/CD platform that gained a lot of popularity recently. I participated in building ⭐️ Lighthouse CI Action and was curious how well it performs.
But Github Marketplace UI shows no ranking information. Essentially, It's a search with random results; at least, I don't understand the order. I couldn't find ⭐️ Lighthouse CI Action in Continuous integration category after browsing 50 available pages (Each page shows 20 results, so it's possible to see only 1000 results, but CI category has 1469 😐).
I decided to build a custom script that crawls all categories and use Github Search (example query) to estimate usa
| $ FILE=/some/path/to/file.txt | |
| ################################### | |
| ### Remove matching suffix pattern | |
| ################################### | |
| $ echo ${FILE%.*} # remove ext | |
| /some/path/to/file | |
| $ FILE=/some/path/to/file.txt.jpg.gpg # note various file exts |
If you're doing stuff with Ruby on a Mac, e.g. installling Jekyll or something, by default you'll end up having to use the sudo command to do stuff, since the permission to modify the default config is not available to your user account.
This sucks and should be avoided. Here's how to fix that.
To make this better, we are going install a new, custom Ruby. This used to be a big, scary thing, but thanks to the awesome tools Homebrew and rbenv, it's a snap.*
A word of warning: you will have to use Terminal to install this stuff. If you are uncomfortable with text, words, and doing stuff with your computer beyond pointing and hoping, this may not work well for you. But if that's the case, I'm not sure why you were trying to use Ruby in the first place.
| // XPath CheatSheet | |
| // To test XPath in your Chrome Debugger: $x('/html/body') | |
| // http://www.jittuu.com/2012/2/14/Testing-XPath-In-Chrome/ | |
| // 0. XPath Examples. | |
| // More: http://xpath.alephzarro.com/content/cheatsheet.html | |
| '//hr[@class="edge" and position()=1]' // every first hr of 'edge' class |
| # Google's Language Map | |
| ach : Acoli | |
| af : Afrikaans | |
| ak : Akan | |
| am : አማርኛ | |
| ar : العربية | |
| az : azərbaycan | |
| ban : Balinese | |
| be : беларуская | |
| bem : Ichibemba |