- Bundler - Bundler maintains a consistent environment for ruby applications. It tracks an application's code and the rubygems it needs to run, so that an application will always have the exact gems (and versions) that it needs to run.
- rabl - General ruby templating with json, bson, xml, plist and msgpack support
- Thin - Very fast and lightweight Ruby web server
- Unicorn - Unicorn is an HTTP server for Rack applications designed to only serve fast clients on low-latency, high-bandwidth connections and take advantage of features in Unix/Unix-like kernels.
- SimpleCov - SimpleCov is a code coverage analysis tool for Ruby 1.9.
- Zeus - Zeus preloads your Rails app so that your normal development tasks such as console, server, generate, and specs/tests take less than one second.
- [factory_girl](h
// Use Gists to store code you would like to remember later on | |
console.log(window); // log the "window" object to the console |
- lxml - Pythonic binding for the C libraries libxml2 and libxslt.
- boto - Python interface to Amazon Web Services
- Django - Django is a high-level Python Web framework that encourages rapid development and clean, pragmatic design.
- Fabric - Library and command-line tool for streamlining the use of SSH for application deployment or systems administration task.
- PyMongo - Tools for working with MongoDB, and is the recommended way to work with MongoDB from Python.
- Celery - Task queue to distribute work across threads or machines.
- pytz - pytz brings the Olson tz database into Python. This library allows accurate and cross platform timezone calculations using Python 2.4 or higher.
This describes how I setup Atom for an ideal Clojure development workflow. This fixes indentation on newlines, handles parentheses, etc. The keybinding settings for enter (in keymap.cson) are important to get proper newlines with indentation at the right level. There are other helpers in init.coffee and keymap.cson that are useful for cutting, copying, pasting, deleting, and indenting Lisp expressions.
The Atom documentation is excellent. It's highly worth reading the flight manual.
This describes how I setup Atom for an ideal Clojure development workflow. This fixes indentation on newlines, handles parentheses, etc. The keybinding settings for enter (in keymap.cson) are important to get proper newlines with indentation at the right level. There are other helpers in init.coffee and keymap.cson that are useful for cutting, copying, pasting, deleting, and indenting Lisp expressions.
The Atom documentation is excellent. It's highly worth reading the flight manual.
-- AppleScript -- | |
-- This example is meant as a simple starting point to show how to get the information in the simplest available way. | |
-- Keep in mind that when asking for a `return` after another, only the first one will be output. | |
-- This method is as good as its JXA counterpart. | |
-- Google Chrome | |
tell application "Google Chrome" to return title of active tab of front window | |
tell application "Google Chrome" to return URL of active tab of front window | |
-- Google Chrome Canary |
/** | |
* Making promises | |
*/ | |
let okPromise = Js.Promise.make((~resolve, ~reject as _) => [@bs] resolve("ok")); | |
/* Simpler promise creation for static values */ | |
Js.Promise.resolve("easy"); | |
Js.Promise.reject(Invalid_argument("too easy")); |
If you have an M1 Mac and want to compile and execute x86_64 assembly code, make sure you install Rosetta 2 and nasm
(brew install nasm
).
Than, take a 64 Bit assembly program, e.g. from this tutorial page (https://cs.lmu.edu/~ray/notes/nasmtutorial/) in Section
"Your First Program" for macOS, save it to a file called hello.asm
.
Compile, link and execute the program:
nasm -f macho64 hello.asm
ld hello.o -o hello -macosx_version_min 11.0 -L /Library/Developer/CommandLineTools/SDKs/MacOSX.sdk/usr/lib -lSystem
./hello