The following compares the output of several creative hash functions designed for human readability.
sha1's are merely used as arbitrary, longer, distributed input values.
input | 1 word output | 2 word output | 3 word output |
---|
import redis | |
import threading | |
class Listener(threading.Thread): | |
def __init__(self, r, channels): | |
threading.Thread.__init__(self) | |
self.redis = r | |
self.pubsub = self.redis.pubsub() | |
self.pubsub.subscribe(channels) | |
# I place this in the public domain | |
# This only handles non-nested lists, emphasis, headings and horizontal rules (which are converted to page breaks) | |
# Sufficient for converting Markdown generated HTML to reportlab flowables... | |
import xml.sax as sax | |
def html_to_rl(html, styleSheet): | |
elements = list() |
def dict_to_redis_hset(r, hkey, dict_to_store): | |
""" | |
Saves `dict_to_store` dict into Redis hash, where `hkey` is key of hash. | |
>>> import redis | |
>>> r = redis.StrictRedis(host='localhost') | |
>>> d = {'a':1, 'b':7, 'foo':'bar'} | |
>>> dict_to_redis_hset(r, 'test', d) | |
True | |
>>> r.hgetall('test') |
The following compares the output of several creative hash functions designed for human readability.
sha1's are merely used as arbitrary, longer, distributed input values.
input | 1 word output | 2 word output | 3 word output |
---|
>>> from collections import namedtuple | |
>>> d = {"name": "joe", "age": 20} | |
>>> d | |
{'age': 20, 'name': 'joe'} | |
>>> d_named = namedtuple("Employee", d.keys())(*d.values()) | |
>>> d_named | |
Employee(name='joe', age=20) | |
>>> d_named.name | |
'joe' |
#!/usr/bin/env python3 | |
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*- | |
# See : https://github.com/docker/docker-py | |
import docker | |
import argparse | |
import pathlib | |
from collections import deque | |
import time | |
import datetime |