You can post a json file with curl
like so:
curl -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d @FILENAME DESTINATION
so for example:
#!/usr/bin/env python | |
def curry(func): | |
""" | |
Decorator to curry a function, typical usage: | |
>>> @curry | |
... def foo(a, b, c): | |
... return a + b + c |
# extracted from http//www.naturalearthdata.com/download/110m/cultural/ne_110m_admin_0_countries.zip | |
# under public domain terms | |
country_bounding_boxes = { | |
'AF': ('Afghanistan', (60.5284298033, 29.318572496, 75.1580277851, 38.4862816432)), | |
'AO': ('Angola', (11.6400960629, -17.9306364885, 24.0799052263, -4.43802336998)), | |
'AL': ('Albania', (19.3044861183, 39.624997667, 21.0200403175, 42.6882473822)), | |
'AE': ('United Arab Emirates', (51.5795186705, 22.4969475367, 56.3968473651, 26.055464179)), | |
'AR': ('Argentina', (-73.4154357571, -55.25, -53.628348965, -21.8323104794)), | |
'AM': ('Armenia', (43.5827458026, 38.7412014837, 46.5057198423, 41.2481285671)), |
Each YouTube video has 4 generated images. They are predictably formatted as follows: | |
http://img.youtube.com/vi/<insert-youtube-video-id-here>/0.jpg | |
http://img.youtube.com/vi/<insert-youtube-video-id-here>/1.jpg | |
http://img.youtube.com/vi/<insert-youtube-video-id-here>/2.jpg | |
http://img.youtube.com/vi/<insert-youtube-video-id-here>/3.jpg | |
The first one in the list is a full size image and others are thumbnail images. The default thumbnail image (ie. one of 1.jpg, 2.jpg, 3.jpg) is: | |
http://img.youtube.com/vi/<insert-youtube-video-id-here>/default.jpg |
def get_count(q): | |
count_q = q.statement.with_only_columns([func.count()]).order_by(None) | |
count = q.session.execute(count_q).scalar() | |
return count | |
q = session.query(TestModel).filter(...).order_by(...) | |
# Slow: SELECT COUNT(*) FROM (SELECT ... FROM TestModel WHERE ...) ... | |
print q.count() |
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*- | |
# ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- | |
# Script to warm up the instance. | |
# | |
# The script starts/restarts the instance and measures the time it takes the | |
# instance to become responsive. Afterwards it crawls the front-page for links | |
# and warms up these resources. | |
# ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- | |
from datetime import datetime |
sudo find /private/var/folders/ -name com.apple.dock.iconcache -exec rm {} \; |
/* | |
No jQuery necessary. | |
Thanks to Dan's StackOverflow answer for this: | |
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/123999/how-to-tell-if-a-dom-element-is-visible-in-the-current-viewport | |
*/ | |
function isElementInViewport(el) { | |
var rect = el.getBoundingClientRect(); | |
return ( | |
rect.top >= 0 && |
var str = "The quick brown fox jumped over the box like an ox with a sox in its mouth"; | |
str.match(/\w(ox)/g); // ["fox", "box", "sox"] | |
// match (when used with a 'g' flag) returns an Array with all matches found | |
// if you don't use the 'g' flag then it acts the same as the 'exec' method. | |
str.match(/\w(ox)/); // ["fox", "ox"] | |
/\w(ox)/.exec(str); // ["fox", "ox"] |
To get Git to diff between your odt/odp/ods files you will need to do the following things: | |
Install a conversion tool | |
$ sudo yum install odt2txt | |
Create your git config info directory if it's not already there | |
$ mkdir -p ~/.config/git/info | |
Add in attributes (you can paste this straight in or edit the file accordingly) | |
$ cat > ~/.config/git/info/attributes <<DELIM |