Skip to content

Instantly share code, notes, and snippets.

View jrabary's full-sized avatar

Jaonary Rabarisoa jrabary

View GitHub Profile
import numpy as np
import theano
import theano.tensor as T
from theano import ifelse
from .. import init
from .. import nonlinearities
from .base import Layer
@keeperofthenecklace
keeperofthenecklace / Testing REST APIs with Cucumber and Rack::Test
Created August 18, 2012 20:00
Testing REST APIs with Cucumber and Rack::Test
# First attempting to use Capybara directly, you will ran into issues when trying to set HTTP header.
# Using Basic HTTP Authentication requires that we needed to set the header.
# Also we need to set the Content-Type and Accept headers to ensure that Rails handles the input and output correctly.
# When using Rack, Capybara delegates request and response handling down to Rack::Test.
# So I used Rack::Test directly in my step definitions, and it works.
# Rack::Test has a module called Rack::Test::Methods that can be mixed into a class to provide it
# with methods for get, post, put, delete as well as last_request, last_response, header and more.
# I mixed Rack::Test::Methods into the Cucumber world at the top of our API steps file like so:
##############################

Recently, we've been working on extracting Ember conventions from applications we're working on into the framework. Our goal is to make it clearer how the parts of an Ember application work together, and how to organize and bootstrap your objects.

Routing

Routing is an important part of web applications. It allows your users to share the URL they see in their browser, and have the same things appear when their friends click on the link.

The Ember.js ecosystem has several great solutions for routing. But, since it is such an important part of most web applications, we've decided to build it right into the framework.

If you have already modeled your application state using Ember.StateManager, there are a few changes you'll need to make to enable routing. Once you've made those changes, you'll notice the browser's address bar spring to life as you start using your app—just by moving between states, Ember.js will update the URL automatically.

@benedikt
benedikt / active_model_serializers.rb
Created March 2, 2012 17:40
Makes mongoid and active_model_serializers play nicely together
# config/initializers/active_model_serializers.rb
Mongoid::Document.send(:include, ActiveModel::SerializerSupport)
Mongoid::Criteria.delegate(:active_model_serializer, :to => :to_a)
@mrrooijen
mrrooijen / .gitignore
Created February 1, 2012 18:04
MiddleMan on Heroku configuration.
.DS_Store
*.swp
*.swo
Gemfile.lock
@ehlyzov
ehlyzov / ffmpeg.rb
Created January 4, 2012 20:34 — forked from Flamefork/ffmpeg.rb
ffmpeg & carrierwave
module CarrierWave
module FFMPEG
extend ActiveSupport::Concern
module ClassMethods
def faststart
process :faststart => true
end
def transcode options
@alkema
alkema / deploy.rb
Created July 9, 2011 20:01
Capistrano task for a Node.js app with github Forever and NPM.
set :application, "appname"
set :deploy_to, "/var/www"
set :scm, :git
set :repository, "[email protected]:user/app.git"
default_run_options[:pty] = true
set :user, "www-data"
set :domain, "foo.tld"
set :normalize_asset_timestamps, false