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@mislav
mislav / pagination.md
Created October 12, 2010 17:20
"Pagination 101" by Faruk Ateş

Pagination 101

Article by Faruk Ateş, [originally on KuraFire.net][original] which is currently down

One of the most commonly overlooked and under-refined elements of a website is its pagination controls. In many cases, these are treated as an afterthought. I rarely come across a website that has decent pagination, and it always makes me wonder why so few manage to get it right. After all, I'd say that pagination is pretty easy to get right. Alas, that doesn't seem the case, so after encouragement from Chris Messina on Flickr I decided to write my Pagination 101, hopefully it'll give you some clues as to what makes good pagination.

Before going into analyzing good and bad pagination, I want to explain just what I consider to be pagination: Pagination is any kind of control system that lets the user browse through pages of search results, archives, or any other kind of continued content. Search results are the o

@ryanlecompte
ryanlecompte / gist:1283413
Created October 13, 2011 04:50
Providing an ActiveRecord-like before_filter capability to arbitrary Ruby classes
# First the end result of what we want:
class Foo
before_hook :whoa
before_hook :amazing
def test
puts "This is kinda cool!"
end
@wakiki
wakiki / gist:3312792
Created August 10, 2012 09:12
Rails 3 merging scope with OR
# By Steve Leung
# [email protected]
class ActiveRecord::Relation
# temporarily hack for allowing combining scopes with OR
# doesn't add the join tables so need to use .includes manually
# ie. Jobship.includes(:job).or(Jobship.accepted, Jobship.declined).count
def or(*scopes)
clauses = *scopes.map do |relation|
@piscisaureus
piscisaureus / pr.md
Created August 13, 2012 16:12
Checkout github pull requests locally

Locate the section for your github remote in the .git/config file. It looks like this:

[remote "origin"]
	fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
	url = [email protected]:joyent/node.git

Now add the line fetch = +refs/pull/*/head:refs/remotes/origin/pr/* to this section. Obviously, change the github url to match your project's URL. It ends up looking like this:

@Mithrandir0x
Mithrandir0x / gist:3639232
Created September 5, 2012 16:15
Difference between Service, Factory and Provider in AngularJS
// Source: https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/angular/hVrkvaHGOfc
// jsFiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/pkozlowski_opensource/PxdSP/14/
// author: Pawel Kozlowski
var myApp = angular.module('myApp', []);
//service style, probably the simplest one
myApp.service('helloWorldFromService', function() {
this.sayHello = function() {
return "Hello, World!"
@ivanvanderbyl
ivanvanderbyl / account_routes.js
Last active January 31, 2016 17:55
Using Ember initializers and injections to setup the `currentUser` within your app.
App.AccountEditRoute = Ember.Route.extend({
setupController: function(controller) {
controller.set('content', this.get('currentUser'));
}
});
@desandro
desandro / require-js-discussion.md
Created January 31, 2013 20:26
Can you help me understand the benefit of require.js?

I'm having trouble understanding the benefit of require.js. Can you help me out? I imagine other developers have a similar interest.

From Require.js - Why AMD:

The AMD format comes from wanting a module format that was better than today's "write a bunch of script tags with implicit dependencies that you have to manually order"

I don't quite understand why this methodology is so bad. The difficult part is that you have to manually order dependencies. But the benefit is that you don't have an additional layer of abstraction.


@nzakas
nzakas / gist:5511916
Created May 3, 2013 17:47
Using GitHub inside a company

I'm doing some research on how companies use GitHub Enterprise (or public GitHub) internally. If you can help out by answering a few questions, I'd greatly appreciate it.

  1. What is the primary setup? Is there an organization and each official repo is owned by that organization?
  2. Does every engineer have a fork of each repo they're working on?
  3. Are engineers allowed to push directly to the official repo? Or must all commits go through a pull request?
  4. Do engineers work on feature branches on the main repo or on their own forks?
  5. Do you require engineers to squash commits and rebase before merging?
  6. Overall, what is the workflow for getting a new commit into the main repository?
  7. What sort of hooks do you make use of?
  8. Are there any ops issues you encountered? (Scaling, unforeseen downtime, etc.)
/* global google */
var GoogleMapComponent = Ember.Component.extend({
places: [],
width: 500,
height: 500,
attributeBindings: ['style'],
style: function () {
return 'width:'+this.width+'px; height:'+this.height+'px';