Skip to content

Instantly share code, notes, and snippets.

View wladimir's full-sized avatar
🏠
Working from home

Vladimir Ćirković wladimir

🏠
Working from home
  • Belgrade, Serbia
View GitHub Profile
@klappy
klappy / SKMultilineLabel.swift
Last active October 11, 2017 03:21 — forked from kevinwo/SKMultilineLabel.swift
Multi line label in Sprite Kit in Swift
//
// SKMultilineLabel.swift
//
// Created by Craig on 10/04/2015
// Modified by Christopher Klapp on 11/21/2015 for line breaks \n for paragraphs
// Copyright (c) 2015 Interactive Coconut. All rights reserved.
//
/* USE:
(most component parameters have defaults)
@marick
marick / about_those_lava_lamps.md
Last active June 22, 2022 21:08
About Those Lava Lamps

Around 2006-2007, it was a bit of a fashion to hook lava lamps up to the build server. Normally, the green lava lamp would be on, but if the build failed, it would turn off and the red lava lamp would turn on.

By coincidence, I've actually met, about that time, (probably) the first person to hook up a lava lamp to a build server. It was Alberto Savoia, who'd founded a testing tools company (that did some very interesting things around generative testing that have basically never been noticed). Alberto had noticed that people did not react with any urgency when the build broke. They'd check in broken code and go off to something else, only reacting to the breakage they'd caused when some other programmer pulled the change and had problems.

@leonardofed
leonardofed / README.md
Last active July 10, 2025 04:43
A curated list of AWS resources to prepare for the AWS Certifications


A curated list of AWS resources to prepare for the AWS Certifications

A curated list of awesome AWS resources you need to prepare for the all 5 AWS Certifications. This gist will include: open source repos, blogs & blogposts, ebooks, PDF, whitepapers, video courses, free lecture, slides, sample test and many other resources.


@subfuzion
subfuzion / dep.md
Last active July 25, 2024 03:38
Concise guide to golang/dep

Overview

This gist is based on the information available at golang/dep, only slightly more terse and annotated with a few notes and links primarily for my own personal benefit. It's public in case this information is helpful to anyone else as well.

I initially advocated Glide for my team and then, more recently, vndr. I've also taken the approach of exerting direct control over what goes into vendor/ in my Dockerfiles, and also work from isolated GOPATH environments on my system per project to ensure that dependencies are explicitly found under vendor/.

At the end of the day, vendoring (and committing vendor/) is about being in control of your dependencies and being able to achieve reproducible builds. While you can achieve this manually, things that are nice to have in a vendoring tool include:

@dabit3
dabit3 / marketplace.sol
Last active April 29, 2025 06:06
NFT Marketplace Smart Contract (V2)
// SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT
pragma solidity ^0.8.4;
import "@openzeppelin/contracts/utils/Counters.sol";
import "@openzeppelin/contracts/token/ERC721/extensions/ERC721URIStorage.sol";
import "@openzeppelin/contracts/token/ERC721/ERC721.sol";
import "hardhat/console.sol";
contract NFTMarketplace is ERC721URIStorage {