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@senko
senko / onchange.sh
Last active April 1, 2025 17:30
OnChange - Watch current directory and execute a command if anything in it changes
#!/bin/bash
#
# Watch current directory (recursively) for file changes, and execute
# a command when a file or directory is created, modified or deleted.
#
# Written by: Senko Rasic <[email protected]>
#
# Requires Linux, bash and inotifywait (from inotify-tools package).
#
# To avoid executing the command multiple times when a sequence of
@willurd
willurd / web-servers.md
Last active July 14, 2025 21:19
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
@jteneycke
jteneycke / gist:7947353
Last active May 28, 2025 06:24
How to install and configure Common Lisp for Emacs. (SBCL + Slime + Emacs24)

In your shell

sudo apt-get install sbcl
curl -O http://beta.quicklisp.org/quicklisp.lisp
sbcl --load quicklisp.lisp

Inside the context of sbcl

@oliveratgithub
oliveratgithub / emojis.json
Last active July 16, 2025 08:06
Emoji-list with emojis, names, shortcodes, unicode and html entities [massive list]
{
"emojis": [
{"emoji": "👩‍👩‍👧‍👧", "name": "family: woman, woman, girl, girl", "shortname": ":woman_woman_girl_girl:", "unicode": "1F469 200D 1F469 200D 1F467 200D 1F467", "html": "&#128105;&zwj;&#128105;&zwj;&#128103;&zwj;&#128103;", "category": "People & Body (family)", "order": ""},
{"emoji": "👩‍👩‍👧‍👦", "name": "family: woman, woman, girl, boy", "shortname": ":woman_woman_girl_boy:", "unicode": "1F469 200D 1F469 200D 1F467 200D 1F466", "html": "&#128105;&zwj;&#128105;&zwj;&#128103;&zwj;&#128102;", "category": "People & Body (family)", "order": ""},
{"emoji": "👩‍👩‍👦‍👦", "name": "family: woman, woman, boy, boy", "shortname": ":woman_woman_boy_boy:", "unicode": "1F469 200D 1F469 200D 1F466 200D 1F466", "html": "&#128105;&zwj;&#128105;&zwj;&#128102;&zwj;&#128102;", "category": "People & Body (family)", "order": ""},
{"emoji": "👨‍👩‍👧‍👧", "name": "family: man, woman, girl, girl", "shortname": ":man_woman_girl_girl:", "unicode": "1F468 200D 1F469 200D 1F467 200D 1F467", "html": "&#128104;&zwj;&#128105;&z
@roman01la
roman01la / core.clj
Created February 4, 2018 16:46
Parsing with clojure.spec
(require '[clojure.spec.alpha :as s])
[:h1 {} "0" 1 [:span]]
(s/def :hiccup/form
(s/or
:string string?
:number number?
:element :hiccup/element))
@vindarel
vindarel / common-lisp-VS-clojure.md
Last active June 28, 2025 08:13
Notes on Common Lisp VS Clojure

Testimonies

CL's compiler

The thing in CL I miss most doing Clojure as my day job? CL's compiler. I like having a compiler tell me at compile time about the mistakes I've made. Bogus arguments. Unreachable code because of unhandled exceptions, and so on. CL saves me round after round of bugs that in clojure aren't found until you run the code. If you test well, it's found when testing, if you don't it's found in production. "Clojure compiler" almost demands air quotes.

CL's optional but oh-so-useful model of type declarations is also infinitely more useful (to me) than Clojure's use of "spec", and instrumentation that happens only at test time because of the cost. Depending on the OPTIMIZE declarations, other type defs are a floor wax and dessert topping. Want checks for argument types? Lower optimizations. Want most efficient machine code? High optimizations.

/u/Decweb, March 2023 https://www.reddit.com/r/lisp/comments/11ttnxk/the_rise_fall_of_lisp_too_good_for_the_rest_of/jczpysp/

@eev2
eev2 / create-scratch-buffer.el
Last active July 15, 2025 14:47
Create a new scratch buffer in emacs
(defun create-scratch-buffer (&optional nomode)
"Create a new scratch buffer and switch to it. If the region is active, then
paste the contents of the region in the new buffer. The new buffer inherits
the mode of the original buffer unless nomode is set.
Return the buffer."
(interactive "P")
(let ((bufname (get-buffer-create (generate-new-buffer-name "*scratch*")))
(mjmode (if nomode 'fundamental-mode (major-mode-remap major-mode))))
(when (use-region-p)
(insert-into-buffer bufname (point) (mark t))
@vindarel
vindarel / Common Lisp VS Racket - testimonies.md
Last active June 4, 2025 21:12
Common Lisp VS Racket. Feedback from (common) lispers.

Developer experience, libraries, performance… (2021/11)

I'll preface this with three things. 1. I prefer schemes over Common Lisps, and I prefer Racket of the Schemes. 2. There is more to it than the points I raise here. 3. I assume you have no previous experience with Lisp, and don't have a preference for Schemes over Common Lisp. With all that out of the way... I would say Common Lisp/SBCL. Let me explain

  1. SBCL Is by far the most common of the CL implementations in 2021. It will be the easiest to find help for, easiest to find videos about, and many major open source CL projects are written using SBCL
  2. Download a binary directly from the website http://www.sbcl.org/platform-table.html (even for M1 macs) to get up and running (easy to get started)
  3. Great video for setting up Emacs + Slime + Quick Lisp https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VnWVu8VVDbI

Now as to why Common Lisp over Scheme

@didibus
didibus / clojure-right-tool.md
Last active February 3, 2025 02:38
When is Clojure "the right tool for the job"?

My answer to: https://www.reddit.com/r/Clojure/comments/pcwypb/us_engineers_love_to_say_the_right_tool_for_the/ which asked to know when and at what is Clojure "the right tool for the job"?

My take is that in general, the right tool for the job actually doesn't matter that much when it comes to programming language.

There are only a few cases where the options of tools that can do a sufficiently good job at the task become limited.

That's why they are called: General-purpose programming languages, because they can be used generally for most use cases without issues.

Let's look at some of the dimensions that make a difference and what I think of Clojure for them:

@raysan5
raysan5 / raylib_vs_sdl.md
Last active July 8, 2025 18:03
raylib vs SDL - A libraries comparison

raylib_vs_sdl

In the last years I've been asked multiple times about the comparison between raylib and SDL libraries. Unfortunately, my experience with SDL was quite limited so I couldn't provide a good comparison. In the last two years I've learned about SDL and used it to teach at University so I feel that now I can provide a good comparison between both.

Hope it helps future users to better understand this two libraries internals and functionality.

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