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Sergey Arkhipov 9seconds

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@sanchezzzhak
sanchezzzhak / clickhouse-get-tables-size.sql
Created January 18, 2018 13:43
clickhouse get tables size
SELECT table,
formatReadableSize(sum(bytes)) as size,
min(min_date) as min_date,
max(max_date) as max_date
FROM system.parts
WHERE active
GROUP BY table
@fiatjaf
fiatjaf / check_sig.go
Last active March 24, 2023 08:36 — forked from lsowen/check_sig.go
GPG signature verification in Go with a bunch of strings
package main [33/492]
import (
"fmt"
"strings"
"golang.org/x/crypto/openpgp"
)
func main() {
@roycoding
roycoding / slots.md
Last active July 1, 2022 15:29
slots - A multi-armed bandit library in Python

Multi-armed banditry in Python with slots

Roy Keyes

22 Aug 2016 - This is a post on my blog.

I recently released slots, a Python library that implements multi-armed bandit strategies. If that sounds like something that won't put you to sleep, then please pip install slots and read on.

Some one armed bandits

Multi-armed bandits

@drmalex07
drmalex07 / README-setup-tunnel-as-systemd-service.md
Last active November 8, 2024 00:56
Setup a secure (SSH) tunnel as a systemd service. #systemd #ssh #ssh-tunnel #ssh-forward

README

Create a template service file at /etc/systemd/system/[email protected]. The template parameter will correspond to the name of target host:

[Unit]
Description=Setup a secure tunnel to %I
After=network.target
@stuart-warren
stuart-warren / Vagrantfile
Created August 18, 2015 07:38
Ubuntu cloud with user-data cloud config in Vagrant
# -*- mode: ruby -*-
# vi: set ft=ruby :
CLOUD_CONFIG_PATH = File.join(File.dirname(__FILE__), "user-data")
# All Vagrant configuration is done below. The "2" in Vagrant.configure
# configures the configuration version (we support older styles for
# backwards compatibility). Please don't change it unless you know what
# you're doing.
@bradfrost
bradfrost / gist:59096a855281c433adc1
Last active September 4, 2023 15:01
Why I'm Not A JavaScript Developer

Answering the Front-end developer JavaScript interview questions to the best of my ability.

  • Explain event delegation

Sometimes you need to delegate events to things.

  • Explain how this works in JavaScript

This references the object or "thing" defined elsewhere. It's like "hey, thing I defined elsewhere, I'm talkin' to you."

  • Explain how prototypal inheritance works.
@staltz
staltz / introrx.md
Last active November 17, 2024 01:08
The introduction to Reactive Programming you've been missing

Latency numbers every programmer should know

L1 cache reference ......................... 0.5 ns
Branch mispredict ............................ 5 ns                     on recent CPU
L2 cache reference ........................... 7 ns                     14x L1 cache
Mutex lock/unlock ........................... 25 ns
Main memory reference ...................... 100 ns                     20x L2 cache, 200x L1 cache
Compress 1K bytes with Zippy ............. 3,000 ns  =   3 µs
Send 2K bytes over 1 Gbps network ....... 20,000 ns  =  20 µs
SSD random read ........................ 150,000 ns  = 150 µs

Read 1 MB sequentially from memory ..... 250,000 ns = 250 µs 4X memory

@pascalpoitras
pascalpoitras / config.md
Last active October 7, 2024 01:35
My WeeChat configuration

WeeChat Screenshot

Mouse


enable


@jvns
jvns / interview-questions.md
Last active November 3, 2024 03:54
A list of questions you could ask while interviewing

A lot of these are outright stolen from Edward O'Campo-Gooding's list of questions. I really like his list.

I'm having some trouble paring this down to a manageable list of questions -- I realistically want to know all of these things before starting to work at a company, but it's a lot to ask all at once. My current game plan is to pick 6 before an interview and ask those.

I'd love comments and suggestions about any of these.

I've found questions like "do you have smart people? Can I learn a lot at your company?" to be basically totally useless -- everybody will say "yeah, definitely!" and it's hard to learn anything from them. So I'm trying to make all of these questions pretty concrete -- if a team doesn't have an issue tracker, they don't have an issue tracker.

I'm also mostly not asking about principles, but the way things are -- not "do you think code review is important?", but "Does all code get reviewed?".