This guide will demonstrate how to mirror an SVN into a Git repo. You're the target audience if you're an SVN user, just getting started with Git and need to coax your project team over to Git.
The branching scenario has been simplified for clarity.
The following recipes are sampled from a trained neural net. You can find the repo to train your own neural net here: https://github.com/karpathy/char-rnn Thanks to Andrej Karpathy for the great code! It's really easy to setup.
The recipes I used for training the char-rnn are from a recipe collection called ffts.com And here is the actual zipped data (uncompressed ~35 MB) I used for training. The ZIP is also archived @ archive.org in case the original links becomes invalid in the future.
| """ | |
| Minimal character-level Vanilla RNN model. Written by Andrej Karpathy (@karpathy) | |
| BSD License | |
| """ | |
| import numpy as np | |
| # data I/O | |
| data = open('input.txt', 'r').read() # should be simple plain text file | |
| chars = list(set(data)) | |
| data_size, vocab_size = len(data), len(chars) |
| namespace Analogy | |
| { | |
| /// <summary> | |
| /// This example shows that a library that needs access to target .NET Standard 1.3 | |
| /// can only access APIs available in that .NET Standard. Even though similar the APIs exist on .NET | |
| /// Framework 4.5, it implements a version of .NET Standard that isn't compatible with the library. | |
| /// </summary>INetCoreApp10 | |
| class Example1 | |
| { | |
| public void Net45Application(INetFramework45 platform) |
| using System; | |
| using System.Collections.Generic; | |
| using Hangfire.Client; | |
| using Hangfire.Common; | |
| using Hangfire.States; | |
| using Hangfire.Storage; | |
| /// <summary> | |
| /// Makes sure that 2 (or more) same jobs will not be run twice at the same time. |