UPDATE a fork of this gist has been used as a starting point for a community-maintained "awesome" list: machine-learning-with-ruby Please look here for the most up-to-date info!
- liblinear-ruby: Ruby interface to LIBLINEAR using SWIG
| Solarized | |
| #FDF6E3,#EEE8D5,#93A1A1,#FDF6E3,#EEE8D5,#657B83,#2AA198,#DC322F | |
| Solarized Dark | |
| #073642,#002B36,#B58900,#FDF6E3,#CB4B16,#FDF6E3,#2AA198,#DC322F | |
These instructions will guide you through the process of setting up local, trusted websites on your own computer.
These instructions are intended to be used on macOS Sierra, but they have been known to work in El Capitan, Yosemite, Mavericks, and Mountain Lion.
NOTE: You may substitute the edit command for nano, vim, or whatever the editor of your choice is. Personally, I forward the edit command to Sublime Text:
alias edit="/Applications/Sublime\ Text.app/Contents/SharedSupport/bin/subl"I have moved this over to the Tech Interview Cheat Sheet Repo and has been expanded and even has code challenges you can run and practice against!
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In August 2007 a hacker found a way to expose the PHP source code on facebook.com. He retrieved two files and then emailed them to me, and I wrote about the issue:
http://techcrunch.com/2007/08/11/facebook-source-code-leaked/
It became a big deal:
http://www.techmeme.com/070812/p1#a070812p1
The two files are index.php (the homepage) and search.php (the search page)
An ongoing project to catalogue all of these sneaky, hidden, bleeding edge selectors as I prepare my JSConf EU 2012 talk.
Everything is broken up by tag, but within each the selectors aren't particularly ordered.
I have not tested/verified all of these. Have I missed some or got it wrong? Let me know. - A
A friendly reminder that you may need to set this property on your target/selected element to get the styling results you want:
-webkit-appearance:none;
| # This creates your rails site in the directory called 'davesite'. You can replace 'davesite' with anything that starts with a letter. | |
| rails new davesite | |
| #Change to the davesite directory. | |
| cd davesite | |
| #Logs you onto Heroku. You only really need to do this once unless you have multiple accounts | |
| heroku login |
The normal controller/view flow is to display a view template corresponding to the current controller action, but sometimes we want to change that. We use render in a controller when we want to respond within the current request, and redirect_to when we want to spawn a new request.
The render method is very overloaded in Rails. Most developers encounter it within the view template, using render :partial => 'form' or render @post.comments, but here we'll focus on usage within the controller.