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PageotD / bash-colors.md
Created August 3, 2024 08:40 — forked from JBlond/bash-colors.md
The entire table of ANSI color codes.

Regular Colors

Value Color
\e[0;30m Black
\e[0;31m Red
\e[0;32m Green
\e[0;33m Yellow
\e[0;34m Blue
\e[0;35m Purple
@ayoubzulfiqar
ayoubzulfiqar / folder_structure.md
Created September 5, 2023 06:12
The Folder Structure for Every Golang Project

Go - The Ultimate Folder Structure

Organizing your Go (Golang) project's folder structure can help improve code readability, maintainability, and scalability. While there is no one-size-fits-all structure, here's a common folder structure for a Go project:

project-root/
    ├── cmd/
    │   ├── your-app-name/
    │   │   ├── main.go         # Application entry point
    │   │   └── ...             # Other application-specific files
@DannyQuah
DannyQuah / 2020.08-D.Quah-Pandoc-Workflow-Markdown-PDF.md
Last active September 19, 2024 02:02
My Pandoc Markdown-PDF Workflow for Routine, Not Especially Technical Writing

My Pandoc Markdown-PDF Workflow for Routine, Not Especially Technical, Writing

by Danny Quah, Aug 2020 (revised Jan 2022)

TL;DR: I write technical articles in LaTeX. But shorter, non-technical writings are easier to do in Markdown. How do I produce PDF from Markdown documents? Answer: provide YAML information in the Markdown; run Pandoc (typically through a Makefile or Atom's Markdown Preview Enhanced). To make all this work, some adjustment is needed in Pandoc options and template files.

Pandoc is a filter that takes a written document in a particular format, and produces a version of that same document in yet a different format. I use Pandoc primarily to transform Markdown documents to PDF, but I also draw on Pandoc to convert Word or ODT documents to Markdown. And vice versa.

Available official Pandoc documentation is voluminous. So as a matter of logic the knowledge to generate PDF from Markdown, to the user's desired degree of control, is already extant, out there somewhere. But a user j

@Zekfad
Zekfad / conventional-commits.md
Last active September 23, 2024 10:45
Conventional Commits Cheatsheet

Quick examples

  • feat: new feature
  • fix(scope): bug in scope
  • feat!: breaking change / feat(scope)!: rework API
  • chore(deps): update dependencies

Commit types

  • build: Changes that affect the build system or external dependencies (example scopes: gulp, broccoli, npm)
  • ci: Changes to CI configuration files and scripts (example scopes: Travis, Circle, BrowserStack, SauceLabs)
  • chore: Changes which doesn't change source code or tests e.g. changes to the build process, auxiliary tools, libraries
@qoomon
qoomon / conventional-commits-cheatsheet.md
Last active September 23, 2024 14:35
Conventional Commits Cheatsheet

Conventional Commit Messages

See how a minor change to your commit message style can make a difference.

Tip

Have a look at git-conventional-commits , a CLI util to ensure these conventions, determine version and generate changelogs

Commit Message Formats

Default

@scragly
scragly / learning_dpy.md
Last active March 27, 2024 21:45
Learning discord.py
@amarao
amarao / blame-praise.py
Last active September 23, 2024 02:22
Example of argparse with subparsers for python
#!/usr/bin/env python
import argparse
def main(command_line=None):
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser('Blame Praise app')
parser.add_argument(
'--debug',
action='store_true',
help='Print debug info'
@bharadwaj-raju
bharadwaj-raju / README.md
Last active July 28, 2024 05:21
simple python fileserver with authentication

fileserver.py

Credit to bones7456.

Instructions

Change values in settings.py, place it in the same directory as fileserver.py then run python2 fileserver.py

@adamnew123456
adamnew123456 / diff.py
Last active August 20, 2024 09:42
An implementation of the Myers diff algorithm
# This is free and unencumbered software released into the public domain.
#
# Anyone is free to copy, modify, publish, use, compile, sell, or
# distribute this software, either in source code form or as a compiled
# binary, for any purpose, commercial or non-commercial, and by any
# means.
#
# In jurisdictions that recognize copyright laws, the author or authors
# of this software dedicate any and all copyright interest in the
# software to the public domain. We make this dedication for the benefit
@thriveth
thriveth / CBcolors.py
Created January 22, 2014 14:52
A color blind/friendly color cycle for Matplotlib line plots. Might want to shuffle it around a bit more,but already not it gives kinda good contrasts between subsequent colors, and shows reasonably well in colorblind filters (though not in pure monochrome).
CB_color_cycle = ['#377eb8', '#ff7f00', '#4daf4a',
'#f781bf', '#a65628', '#984ea3',
'#999999', '#e41a1c', '#dede00']