- 960 Grid System - An effort to streamline web development workflow by providing commonly used dimensions, based on a width of 960 pixels. There are two variants: 12 and 16 columns, which can be used separately or in tandem.
- Compass - Open source CSS Authoring Framework.
- Bootstrap - Sleek, intuitive, and powerful mobile first front-end framework for faster and easier web development.
- Font Awesome - The iconic font designed for Bootstrap.
- Zurb Foundation - Framework for writing responsive web sites.
- SASS - CSS extension language which allows variables, mixins and rules nesting.
- Skeleton - Boilerplate for responsive, mobile-friendly development.
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#!/bin/bash -e | |
clear | |
echo "============================================" | |
echo "WordPress Install Script" | |
echo "============================================" | |
echo "Database Name: " | |
read -e dbname | |
echo "Database User: " | |
read -e dbuser | |
echo "Database Password: " |
- lxml - Pythonic binding for the C libraries libxml2 and libxslt.
- boto - Python interface to Amazon Web Services
- Django - Django is a high-level Python Web framework that encourages rapid development and clean, pragmatic design.
- Fabric - Library and command-line tool for streamlining the use of SSH for application deployment or systems administration task.
- PyMongo - Tools for working with MongoDB, and is the recommended way to work with MongoDB from Python.
- Celery - Task queue to distribute work across threads or machines.
- pytz - pytz brings the Olson tz database into Python. This library allows accurate and cross platform timezone calculations using Python 2.4 or higher.
- Bundler - Bundler maintains a consistent environment for ruby applications. It tracks an application's code and the rubygems it needs to run, so that an application will always have the exact gems (and versions) that it needs to run.
- rabl - General ruby templating with json, bson, xml, plist and msgpack support
- Thin - Very fast and lightweight Ruby web server
- Unicorn - Unicorn is an HTTP server for Rack applications designed to only serve fast clients on low-latency, high-bandwidth connections and take advantage of features in Unix/Unix-like kernels.
- SimpleCov - SimpleCov is a code coverage analysis tool for Ruby 1.9.
- Zeus - Zeus preloads your Rails app so that your normal development tasks such as console, server, generate, and specs/tests take less than one second.
- [factory_girl](h
- jQuery - The de-facto library for the modern age. It makes things like HTML document traversal and manipulation, event handling, animation, and Ajax much simpler with an easy-to-use API that works across a multitude of browsers.
- Backbone - Backbone.js gives structure to web applications by providing models with key-value binding and custom events, collections with a rich API of enumerable functions, views with declarative event handling, and connects it all to your existing API over a RESTful JSON interface.
- AngularJS - Conventions based MVC framework for HTML5 apps.
- Underscore - Underscore is a utility-belt library for JavaScript that provides a lot of the functional programming support that you would expect in Prototype.js (or Ruby), but without extending any of the built-in JavaScript objects.
- lawnchair - Key/value store adapter for indexdb, localStorage
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// Use Gists to store code you would like to remember later on | |
console.log(window); // log the "window" object to the console |
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# Installing Chrome | |
curl -L -O "https://dl.google.com/chrome/mac/stable/GGRO/googlechrome.dmg" | |
hdiutil mount -nobrowse googlechrome.dmg | |
cp -R "/Volumes/Google Chrome/Google Chrome.app" /Applications | |
hdiutil unmount "/Volumes/Google Chrome" | |
rm googlechrome.dmg | |
# Installing Firefox | |
curl -L -o Firefox.dmg "http://download.mozilla.org/?product=firefox-latest&os=osx&lang=en-US" | |
hdiutil mount -nobrowse Firefox.dmg |
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# Install tmux on Centos release 6.6 | |
sudo yum install -y gcc kernel-devel make ncurses-devel | |
curl -OL https://github.com/downloads/libevent/libevent/libevent-2.0.21-stable.tar.gz | |
tar -xvzf libevent-2.0.21-stable.tar.gz | |
cd libevent-2.0.21-stable | |
./configure --prefix=/usr/local | |
make | |
sudo make install |
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# This number should be, at maximum, the number of CPU cores on your system. | |
# (since nginx doesn't benefit from more than one worker per CPU.) | |
worker_processes 8; | |
# Determines how many clients will be served by each worker process. | |
# (Max clients = worker_connections * worker_processes) | |
# "Max clients" is also limited by the number of socket connections available on the system (~64k) | |
# run ss -s and u'll see a timewait param | |
# The reason for TIMED_WAIT is to handle the case of packets arriving after the socket is closed. |
If you just want to fix the issue quickly, scroll down to the "solution" section below.
If you're a Mac Homebrew user and you installed node via Homebrew, there is a major philosophical issue with the way Homebrew and NPM work together. If you install node with Homebrew and then try to do npm update npm -g
, you will see an error like this:
$ npm update npm -g
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