Skip to content

Instantly share code, notes, and snippets.

View sidcode's full-sized avatar

Siddhant Shrivastava sidcode

View GitHub Profile
@bejaneps
bejaneps / websites.csv
Created August 28, 2020 18:09
List of top 1000 websites
1 fonts.googleapis.com 10
2 facebook.com 10
3 twitter.com 10
4 google.com 10
5 youtube.com 10
6 s.w.org 10
7 instagram.com 10
8 googletagmanager.com 10
9 linkedin.com 10
10 ajax.googleapis.com 10
@hzoo
hzoo / naur.md
Last active July 9, 2022 15:28 — forked from dpritchett/naur.md
Programming as Theory Building

Programming as Theory Building

Peter Naur, 1985

PDF: http://pages.cs.wisc.edu/~remzi/Naur.pdf

Introduction

The present discussion is a contribution to the understanding of what programming is. It suggests that programming properly should be regarded as an activity by which the programmers form or achieve a certain kind of insight, a theory, of the matters at hand. This suggestion is in contrast to what appears to be a more common notion, that programming should be regarded as a production of a program and certain other texts.

FWIW: I (@rondy) am not the creator of the content shared here, which is an excerpt from Edmond Lau's book. I simply copied and pasted it from another location and saved it as a personal note, before it gained popularity on news.ycombinator.com. Unfortunately, I cannot recall the exact origin of the original source, nor was I able to find the author's name, so I am can't provide the appropriate credits.


Effective Engineer - Notes

What's an Effective Engineer?

@gtallen1187
gtallen1187 / scar_tissue.md
Created November 1, 2015 23:53
talk given by John Ousterhout about sustaining relationships

"Scar Tissues Make Relationships Wear Out"

04/26/2103. From a lecture by Professor John Ousterhout at Stanford, class CS142.

This is my most touchy-feely thought for the weekend. Here’s the basic idea: It’s really hard to build relationships that last for a long time. If you haven’t discovered this, you will discover this sooner or later. And it's hard both for personal relationships and for business relationships. And to me, it's pretty amazing that two people can stay married for 25 years without killing each other.

[Laughter]

> But honestly, most professional relationships don't last anywhere near that long. The best bands always seem to break up after 2 or 3 years. And business partnerships fall apart, and there's all these problems in these relationships that just don't last. So, why is that? Well, in my view, it’s relationships don't fail because there some single catastrophic event to destroy them, although often there is a single catastrophic event around the the end of the relation

@Two9A
Two9A / decronym.php
Last active April 9, 2024 23:25
Decronym: A simple Reddit bot
<?php
/**
* Dirty, dirty Reddit bot: Decronym
*/
class Reddit {
const USERNAME = 'Decronym';
const PASSWORD = '***';
const CLIENTID = '***';
const SECRET = '***';
@TikhonJelvis
TikhonJelvis / epage
Created May 10, 2014 20:30
A little pager script I wrote that calls out to emacsclient.
#! /usr/bin/env runhaskell
{-# LANGUAGE ScopedTypeVariables #-}
import Data.Functor ((<$))
import System.Directory (removeFile)
import System.Environment (getArgs)
import System.Process (runCommand)
import Text.Printf (printf)
@aras-p
aras-p / preprocessor_fun.h
Last active November 15, 2024 09:22
Things to commit just before leaving your job
// Just before switching jobs:
// Add one of these.
// Preferably into the same commit where you do a large merge.
//
// This started as a tweet with a joke of "C++ pro-tip: #define private public",
// and then it quickly escalated into more and more evil suggestions.
// I've tried to capture interesting suggestions here.
//
// Contributors: @r2d2rigo, @joeldevahl, @msinilo, @_Humus_,
// @YuriyODonnell, @rygorous, @cmuratori, @mike_acton, @grumpygiant,
@jboner
jboner / latency.txt
Last active November 19, 2024 11:10
Latency Numbers Every Programmer Should Know
Latency Comparison Numbers (~2012)
----------------------------------
L1 cache reference 0.5 ns
Branch mispredict 5 ns
L2 cache reference 7 ns 14x L1 cache
Mutex lock/unlock 25 ns
Main memory reference 100 ns 20x L2 cache, 200x L1 cache
Compress 1K bytes with Zippy 3,000 ns 3 us
Send 1K bytes over 1 Gbps network 10,000 ns 10 us
Read 4K randomly from SSD* 150,000 ns 150 us ~1GB/sec SSD
@glacjay
glacjay / tun-ping-linux.py
Created September 18, 2010 04:49
Reading/writing Linux's TUN/TAP device using Python.
import fcntl
import os
import struct
import subprocess
# Some constants used to ioctl the device file. I got them by a simple C
# program.
TUNSETIFF = 0x400454ca
TUNSETOWNER = TUNSETIFF + 2