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@frozeman
frozeman / createContract.js
Last active September 5, 2018 18:57
Deploy contracts on Ethereum and reliable get the contract address
// -> Soldity
// **********
// Your Soldity contract
event Created(bytes32 indexed identifier);
contract MyContract {
function MyContract(bytes32 identifier) {
Created(identifier);
}
@Yimiprod
Yimiprod / difference.js
Last active August 7, 2025 14:25
Deep diff between two object, using lodash
/**
* This code is licensed under the terms of the MIT license
*
* Deep diff between two object, using lodash
* @param {Object} object Object compared
* @param {Object} base Object to compare with
* @return {Object} Return a new object who represent the diff
*/
function difference(object, base) {
function changes(object, base) {
@squarism
squarism / iterm2.md
Last active September 25, 2025 22:29
An iTerm2 Cheatsheet

In the below keyboard shortcuts, I use the capital letters for reading clarity but this does not imply shift, if shift is needed, I will say shift. So + D does not mean hold shift. + Shift + D does of course.

Tabs and Windows

Function Shortcut
New Tab + T
Close Tab or Window + W (same as many mac apps)
Go to Tab + Number Key (ie: ⌘2 is 2nd tab)
Go to Split Pane by Direction + Option + Arrow Key
@gokulkrishh
gokulkrishh / media-query.css
Last active September 12, 2025 14:20
CSS Media Queries for Desktop, Tablet, Mobile.
/*
##Device = Desktops
##Screen = 1281px to higher resolution desktops
*/
@media (min-width: 1281px) {
/* CSS */
@alexpchin
alexpchin / socket-cheatsheet.js
Created December 15, 2015 16:58
A quick cheatsheet for socket.io
// sending to sender-client only
socket.emit('message', "this is a test");
// sending to all clients, include sender
io.emit('message', "this is a test");
// sending to all clients except sender
socket.broadcast.emit('message', "this is a test");
// sending to all clients in 'game' room(channel) except sender
@vasanthk
vasanthk / System Design.md
Last active September 26, 2025 14:22
System Design Cheatsheet

System Design Cheatsheet

Picking the right architecture = Picking the right battles + Managing trade-offs

Basic Steps

  1. Clarify and agree on the scope of the system
  • User cases (description of sequences of events that, taken together, lead to a system doing something useful)
    • Who is going to use it?
    • How are they going to use it?
@DavideMontersino
DavideMontersino / private-fork.md
Last active September 27, 2025 23:26
How to fork to a private gitlab instance

Theory:

your git repository can have more than one remote server; In this case we want to have two:

  1. one for our private repository on gitlab (will be the default one, called origin)
  2. one to be connected to the source repo on github, to be able to pull new changes (will be called upstream)

How to make a private fork from github to gitlab

@SuperPaintman
SuperPaintman / npm-f3-install.sh
Last active April 14, 2025 18:18
NPM install for low RAM machins. And "npm install ... killed" problem
#!/bin/bash
#
# Author: SuperPaintman <[email protected]>
#
###
# Constants
###
RETVAL=0
@joepie91
joepie91 / random.md
Last active August 18, 2025 08:57
Secure random values (in Node.js)

Not all random values are created equal - for security-related code, you need a specific kind of random value.

A summary of this article, if you don't want to read the entire thing:

  • Don't use Math.random(). There are extremely few cases where Math.random() is the right answer. Don't use it, unless you've read this entire article, and determined that it's necessary for your case.
  • Don't use crypto.getRandomBytes directly. While it's a CSPRNG, it's easy to bias the result when 'transforming' it, such that the output becomes more predictable.
  • If you want to generate random tokens or API keys: Use uuid, specifically the uuid.v4() method. Avoid node-uuid - it's not the same package, and doesn't produce reliably secure random values.
  • If you want to generate random numbers in a range: Use random-number-csprng.

You should seriously consider reading the entire article, though - it's

@Geoff-Ford
Geoff-Ford / master-javascript-interview.md
Last active April 4, 2025 21:36
Eric Elliott's Master the JavaScript Interview Series