https://github.com/[yourname]
[Describe ambitions: type of work, attributes of team, what you want to learn & teach]
[in reverse chronological order, list at most 5 positions or 10 years back, whichever is fewer]
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BBEdit / BBEdit-Lite / TextWrangler Regular Expression Guide Modified: 2018/08/10 01:19 | |
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NOTES: | |
The PCRE engine (Perl Compatible Regular Expressions) is what BBEdit and TextWrangler use. | |
Items I'm unsure of are marked '# PCRE?'. The list while fairly comprehensive is not complete. |
https://github.com/[yourname]
[Describe ambitions: type of work, attributes of team, what you want to learn & teach]
[in reverse chronological order, list at most 5 positions or 10 years back, whichever is fewer]
Each of these commands will run an ad hoc http static server in your current (or specified) directory, available at http://localhost:8000. Use this power wisely.
$ python -m SimpleHTTPServer 8000
# alternative to what is explained in the article Ruby Blocks as Dynamic Callbacks: | |
# http://www.mattsears.com/articles/2011/11/27/ruby-blocks-as-dynamic-callbacks | |
class Callbacks | |
def initialize(block) | |
block.call(self) | |
end | |
def callback(message, *args) | |
callbacks[message].call(*args) |
#!/usr/bin/python | |
import sys | |
import os, shutil | |
import subprocess | |
import os.path | |
from datetime import datetime | |
import time | |
######################## Functions ######################### |
'Twas the night before Christmas, when all through the racks | |
Not a server was alerting, not even Compaqs. | |
The backups were written to tapes with care | |
In hopes that later the data would be there. | |
The machines were nestled all snug in their sleds | |
Whilst visions of vengeance danced in their heads; | |
And oncall in his three-wolf and I in my rack. | |
Had just settled down for some syn and some ack. |
Ruby 2.1.0 in Production: known bugs and patches | |
Last week, we upgraded the github.com rails app to ruby 2.1.0 in production. | |
While testing the new build for rollout, we ran into a number of bugs. Most of | |
these have been fixed on trunk already, but I've documented them below to help | |
anyone else who might be testing ruby 2.1 in production. | |
@naruse I think we should backport these patches to the ruby_2_1 branch and | |
release 2.1.1 sooner rather than later, as some of the bugs are quite critical. | |
I'm happy to offer any assistance I can to expedite this process. |
# config/routes.rb | |
resources :documents do | |
scope module: 'documents' do | |
resources :versions do | |
post :restore, on: :member | |
end | |
resource :lock | |
end | |
end |
http://filippo.io/Heartbleed/ is a great service to the community.
I wouldn’t recommend testing hosts againt an online tool. All you do is create a log for a security savvy person with vulnerable hosts. While not quite the same, this is similar to uploading private keys or passwords to a service to check if they are secure.
Luckily it is easy to run the software locally, as the author was so kind to provide the source. I don’t read go very well, but a cursory glance suggests that the software does what it says on the tin, so we don’t worry about it phoning home.
This is the first time I’m building a go project, so I have to install go first. brew install go
is easily done. You can get binary distributions for your OS from the go homepage: https://code.google.com/p/go/downloads/list
require 'nokogiri' | |
require 'open-uri' | |
# Get a Nokogiri::HTML:Document for the page we're interested in... | |
doc = Nokogiri::HTML(open('http://www.google.com/search?q=tenderlove')) | |
# Do funky things with it using Nokogiri::XML::Node methods... | |
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