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Andrei Sebastian Cîmpean andreisebastianc

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This is a proof-of-concept of a couple of concurrent data structures written in Ruby.

The implementations are heavily commented for those interested. There are benchmarks (with results) included below. The results are interesting, but, as always, take with a grain of salt.

Data structures

AtomicLinkedQueue is a lock-free queue, built on atomic CAS operations.

@jaredhirsch
jaredhirsch / gist:4971859
Created February 17, 2013 15:19
all about ETags

ETags: a pretty sweet feature of HTTP 1.1

HTTP caching review

HTTP provides two ways for servers to control client-side caching of page components:

  • freshness may be based on a date or a token whose meaning is app-specific
  • whether or not the client needs to confirm the cached version is up-to-date with the server

This breaks down as follows:

  • Cache locally and don't check before using.
@tbranyen
tbranyen / app.js
Created September 22, 2011 16:51
backbone.js sub routing
/* Pretend app setup stuff is here */
/* Kick off app */
jQuery(function($) {
var Gallery = app.module("gallery");
app.Router = Backbone.Router.extend({
initialize: function() {
this.gallery = new Gallery.Router("gallery/");
@jupiterjs
jupiterjs / JavaScriptMVC.md
Created May 24, 2011 16:58 — forked from moschel/JavaScriptMVC.md
JavaScriptMVC Overview

The following is a VERY rough draft of an article I am working on for Alex MacCaw's @maccman's Book. It is very rough, but even now a worthwhile read. Suggestions / comments are very welcome! Please help me :-)

Introduction

JavaScriptMVC (JMVC) is an open-source jQuery-based JavaScript framework. It is nearly a comprehensive (holistic) front-end development framework, packaging utilities for testing, dependency management, documentation, and a host of useful jQuery plugins.

Yet every part of JavaScriptMVC can be used without every other part, making the library lightweight. Its Class, Model, View, and Controller combined are only 7k minified and compressed, yet even they can be used independently. JavaScriptMVC's independence lets you start small and scale to meet the challenges of the most complex applications on the web.

This chapter covers only JavaScriptMVC's $.Class, $.Model, $.View, and $.Controller. The following describes each component: