For example, you want to set 40% alpha transparence to #000000
(black color), you need to add 66
like this #66000000
.
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Install s3fs on Mac OS X | |
1 - Install Homebrew - http://brew.sh/ | |
ruby -e "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.github.com/Homebrew/homebrew/go/install)" | |
2 - Use Homebrew to install s3fs + dependencies | |
brew install s3fs | |
3 - Do some custom stuff. I only used the first step from here -> https://gist.github.com/fukayatsu/3910097 | |
sudo /bin/cp -rfX /usr/local/Cellar/fuse4x-kext/0.9.2/Library/Extensions/fuse4x.kext /Library/Extensions |
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/** | |
* Fancy ID generator that creates 20-character string identifiers with the following properties: | |
* | |
* 1. They're based on timestamp so that they sort *after* any existing ids. | |
* 2. They contain 72-bits of random data after the timestamp so that IDs won't collide with other clients' IDs. | |
* 3. They sort *lexicographically* (so the timestamp is converted to characters that will sort properly). | |
* 4. They're monotonically increasing. Even if you generate more than one in the same timestamp, the | |
* latter ones will sort after the former ones. We do this by using the previous random bits | |
* but "incrementing" them by 1 (only in the case of a timestamp collision). | |
*/ |
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# On slow systems, checking the cached .zcompdump file to see if it must be | |
# regenerated adds a noticable delay to zsh startup. This little hack restricts | |
# it to once a day. It should be pasted into your own completion file. | |
# | |
# The globbing is a little complicated here: | |
# - '#q' is an explicit glob qualifier that makes globbing work within zsh's [[ ]] construct. | |
# - 'N' makes the glob pattern evaluate to nothing when it doesn't match (rather than throw a globbing error) | |
# - '.' matches "regular files" | |
# - 'mh+24' matches files (or directories or whatever) that are older than 24 hours. | |
autoload -Uz compinit |
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