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Niraj Giri nirajgiriXD

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useful command for debugging.

tail -f <filename>
tail -f -n <number-of-tailing-lines> <filename>

#example to tail from last 1000 files
tail -f -n 1000 <filename>
@dideler
dideler / coursera.html
Last active March 18, 2024 09:53 — forked from kevingessner/gist:9509148
Responsive emails that work
<div id=":vz" class="ii gt m145ad5537035869c adP adO"><div id=":vy" class="a3s" style="overflow: hidden;"><div><div class="adM">
</div><div bgcolor="#fafafa"><div class="adM">
</div><table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" width="100%" bgcolor="#fafafa"><tbody><tr><td align="left" valign="middle" height="40" bgcolor="#e4eff7" style="color:#787878;font-family:Arial;padding:5px 30px 5px 30px">
<div style="font-size:14px;letter-spacing:1px;font-weight:bold;color:#787878"><a href="https://eventing.coursera.org/redirect/K94Ky5AdlhxW-FQnYSZZtJPNSf_mKt0SlLY3BJoPtzGpi9uZUEt5y2t4OE_LPJ_BCElO-LwczCh98rRU3vjkFA.KYet1zUYKuWJE3yZ5nv7dQ.ew5zeZYivcmzO41tPxqLBchVIzZJsUl86CrpCEZL-BqfouGmyTiOsoHV6zgPWIft-5F1i2Ug42EeeOJS1yfZ-yZdoMF_Oc5dO2aP7vtdCqLHEQLkq4-vHwBL8nGe-T7Lypqw5CtuKyoVwWGNHb0s-n1mM3r5RfTIVyrGJYV4m8NKQI-m4K18qD0fszw5u0_OxR_24DUqzkXqfMfOD9_MwhEkfow89tPO2CYoYdWths3E9TQ3gK_KdRjJRm8AfgKVyacIGbanQ3tUENlDUy_E7E9YMuAmYCXUHe02U2p5FlEQW7LnDqTtG3MYC3uVCOW46Bs3_oIFzlryBTrariC7y1s3KXDtwE83vBW9t65D62
@dideler
dideler / quotes.md
Last active October 12, 2024 16:53
Favourite Quotations (in no particular order)

If you spend the next twenty years of your life, you could do something like a Michael Angelo painting, would it be worth it? Of course it would. It would be worth it for that one thing. For things to be worthwhile, they should be difficult.

  • Joe Armstrong

For every power user that writes in asking for a feature, there’s one new user (and ten potential users) that felt the opposite way.

  • Ben Balter

When you’re evaluating potential features, part of your role is to be an advocate for the long tail of users that won’t yet advocate for themselves.

@dideler
dideler / 1-affordances-and-signifiers.md
Last active March 18, 2024 07:37
The Design of Everyday Things (First offering on Udacity)https://www.udacity.com/course/design101

Lesson 1: Affordances and Signifiers

Don't solve the problem given (as it's stated), figure out what the real underlying problem is.

To understand design, you have to be a good observer and question things. Travel with a camera and take photos. Don't use flash, use natural lighting when possible.

Affordances are the relationships (read: possible actions) between an object and an entity (most often a person). For example, a chair affords sitting for a human. Affordances enable interactions between entities and objects (similarly, anti-affordances prevent or reduce interactions). The presence of an affordance is determined by the properties of the object and of the abilities of the entity who's interacting with the object.

Signifiers are signals, communication devices. These signs tell you about the possible actions; what to do, and where to do it. Signifiers are often visible, but invisible (secret) signifiers do exist, like clicking a YT video to play

@dideler
dideler / code_review_checklists.md
Last active July 23, 2024 05:43
Code review checklists. Leave your suggestions in a comment below!

Based on the article: Using checklists for code review

In general, people are pretty good at the code review process, but it's sometimes surprising what can slip through. A natural consequence of the way our brains look at the world is that it's easy to pay a lot of attention to small details and code style flubs, and completely miss the big picture.

Obviously, not everything is applicable for every change. If the review request isn't making any changes to UI, then skip the first two checklists entirely. If a change is a bug fix, typically don't review it for architecture and design principles.

Put the big stuff first (e.g. architecture). You don't want to work through a ton of small issues before realizing that everything has to be rewritten.

Do a pass through the code for each and every item in the checklist. By only looking for a very specific type of defect, each pass goes relatively quickly, even for large changes. Focu

@dideler
dideler / 0-startup-overview.md
Last active November 1, 2024 04:08
Startup Engineering notes
@whitingx
whitingx / meta-tags.md
Created October 5, 2012 16:41 — forked from kevinSuttle/meta-tags.md
Complete List of HTML Meta Tags

Copied from http://code.lancepollard.com/complete-list-of-html-meta-tags/

Basic HTML Meta Tags

<meta charset='UTF-8'>
<meta name='keywords' content='your, tags'>
<meta name='description' content='150 words'>
<meta name='subject' content='your website's subject'>
<meta name='copyright' content='company name'>