A list of useful commands for the ffmpeg command line tool.
Download FFmpeg: https://www.ffmpeg.org/download.html
Full documentation: https://www.ffmpeg.org/ffmpeg.html
./tokenizer_checklist.chk 50 | |
./tokenizer.model 499723 | |
./7B/checklist.chk 100 | |
./7B/consolidated.00.pth 13476939516 | |
./7B/params.json 101 | |
./13B/checklist.chk 154 | |
./13B/consolidated.00.pth 13016334699 | |
./13B/consolidated.01.pth 13016334699 | |
./13B/params.json 101 | |
./30B/checklist.chk 262 |
A list of useful commands for the ffmpeg command line tool.
Download FFmpeg: https://www.ffmpeg.org/download.html
Full documentation: https://www.ffmpeg.org/ffmpeg.html
foo
k$
^[a-f]*$
(...).*\1
^(.(?!(ll|ss|mm|rr|tt|ff|cc|bb)))*$|^n|ef
^(.)[^p].*\1$
^(?!(..+)\1+$)
(.)(.\1){3}
^[^o].....?$
(^39|^44)|(^([0369]|([147][0369]*[258])|(([258]|[147][0369]*[147])([0369]*|[258][0369]*[147])([147]|[258][0369]*[258])))*$)
One of the best ways to reduce complexity (read: stress) in web development is to minimize the differences between your development and production environments. After being frustrated by attempts to unify the approach to SSL on my local machine and in production, I searched for a workflow that would make the protocol invisible to me between all environments.
Most workflows make the following compromises:
Use HTTPS in production but HTTP locally. This is annoying because it makes the environments inconsistent, and the protocol choices leak up into the stack. For example, your web application needs to understand the underlying protocol when using the secure
flag for cookies. If you don't get this right, your HTTP development server won't be able to read the cookies it writes, or worse, your HTTPS production server could pass sensitive cookies over an insecure connection.
Use production SSL certificates locally. This is annoying
#Haskell基础