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@ccstone
ccstone / BBEdit-TextWrangler_RegEx_Cheat_Sheet.txt
Last active March 25, 2025 18:03
BBEdit-TextWrangler Regular Expression Cheat-Sheet
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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.
@h3h
h3h / 0-resume-template.md
Last active July 28, 2016 13:07
Ideal Resume Format for a Software Engineer

https://github.com/[yourname]

Ambition

[Describe ambitions: type of work, attributes of team, what you want to learn & teach]

Experience

[in reverse chronological order, list at most 5 positions or 10 years back, whichever is fewer]

@willurd
willurd / web-servers.md
Last active May 13, 2025 13:11
Big list of http static server one-liners

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.

Discussion on reddit.

Python 2.x

$ python -m SimpleHTTPServer 8000
@nilbus
nilbus / gist:6385142
Last active February 23, 2016 23:35 — forked from ryanlecompte/gist:1420133
Ruby multiple callbacks
# 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 #########################
anonymous
anonymous / night-before-opsmas.txt
Created December 24, 2013 07:19
Twas the night before Opsmas..
'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...
####