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happy to learn something new every day

Orlando Méndez omendezmorales

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happy to learn something new every day
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@avandeursen
avandeursen / LICENSE.md
Last active May 16, 2021 20:21
Reviewing for Elsevier

This little note is licensed under a Creative Commons CC0 License, meaning "No Rights Reserved". So you can reuse this note in whatever way you want, and there is no need to attribute me. Enjoy! :-)

@mfikes
mfikes / polyglot.md
Created April 30, 2018 03:02
Polyglot Graal from ClojureScript

You need to first install GraalVM, and then set your PATH so that you get the GraalVM binaries (incluing the GraalVM version of node).

You can then install R and Ruby via

gu -c install org.graalvm.r
gu -c install org.graalvm.ruby
@jagregory
jagregory / gist:710671
Created November 22, 2010 21:01
How to move to a fork after cloning
So you've cloned somebody's repo from github, but now you want to fork it and contribute back. Never fear!
Technically, when you fork "origin" should be your fork and "upstream" should be the project you forked; however, if you're willing to break this convention then it's easy.
* Off the top of my head *
1. Fork their repo on Github
2. In your local, add a new remote to your fork; then fetch it, and push your changes up to it
git remote add my-fork [email protected]