Install convmv if you don't have it
sudo apt-get install convmv
Convert all files in a directory from NFD to NFC:
convmv -r -f utf8 -t utf8 --nfc --notest .
Install convmv if you don't have it
sudo apt-get install convmv
Convert all files in a directory from NFD to NFC:
convmv -r -f utf8 -t utf8 --nfc --notest .
| {- | |
| Денис Шевченко, 2015 | |
| -} | |
| module Main where | |
| import Control.Monad.Writer.Lazy | |
| import Data.Functor ((<$>)) | |
| import Data.List (dropWhileEnd) | |
| import Data.Char (isSpace) |
Alternate title: Cross compiling Windows/Darwin/Linux amd64/386/arm all from linux
After fumbling around trying to figure out the go toolchain and cross compilation configuration, I ran across the wiki page on Go's homepage. It's super helpful, and worked out of the box. I'm including the necessary scripts here in case they get changed or lost, and we can help Google find it (since it's the first real source I've found that "Just Worked"). http://code.google.com/p/go-wiki/wiki/WindowsCrossCompiling
(by @andrestaltz)
If you prefer to watch video tutorials with live-coding, then check out this series I recorded with the same contents as in this article: Egghead.io - Introduction to Reactive Programming.
At DICOM Grid, we recently made the decision to use Haskell for some of our newer projects, mostly small, independent web services. This isn't the first time I've had the opportunity to use Haskell at work - I had previously used Haskell to write tools to automate some processes like generation of documentation for TypeScript code - but this is the first time we will be deploying Haskell code into production.
Over the past few months, I have been working on two Haskell services:
I will write here mostly about the first project, since it is a self-contained project which provides a good example of the power of Haskell. Moreover, the proces
This blog post series has moved here.
You might also be interested in the 2016 version.
I was trying to get the Arduino IDE to work inside a Docker container on OS X. I was able to get the IDE working (see Getting X11 GUI applications to work on OS X with Docker), but I could not figure out how to make the USB port for the Arduino visible.
I first tried to directly map hardware serial port into the Docker container, doing something like this:
| import sys, importlib | |
| from pathlib import Path | |
| def import_parents(level=1): | |
| global __package__ | |
| file = Path(__file__).resolve() | |
| parent, top = file.parent, file.parents[level] | |
| sys.path.append(str(top)) |
Copyright © 2016-2018 Fantasyland Institute of Learning. All rights reserved.
A function is a mapping from one set, called a domain, to another set, called the codomain. A function associates every element in the domain with exactly one element in the codomain. In Scala, both domain and codomain are types.
val square : Int => Int = x => x * x