- Reverse a String – Enter a string and the program will reverse it and print it out.
- Pig Latin – Pig Latin is a game of alterations played on the English language game. To create the Pig Latin form of an English word the initial consonant sound is transposed to the end of the word and an ay is affixed (Ex.: "banana" would yield anana-bay). Read Wikipedia for more information on rules.
- Count Vowels – Enter a string and the program counts the number of vowels in the text. For added complexity have it report a sum of each vowel found.
- Check if Palindrome – Checks if the string entered by the user is a palindrome. That is that it reads the same forwards as backwards like “racecar”
- Count Words in a String – Counts the number of individual words in a string. For added complexity read these strings in from a text file and generate a summary.
| 00D1E5 | |
| 0111E | |
| 0115 | |
| 011ED | |
| 011F1E1D | |
| 011F1E1D5 | |
| 015E | |
| 01AF | |
| 01D1E |
NOTE: This guide has moved to https://github.com/bpierre/switch-to-vim-for-good
This guide is coming from an email I used to send to newcomers to Vim. It is not intended to be a complete guide, it is about how I switched myself.
My decision to switch to Vim has been made a long time ago. Coming from TextMate 1, I wanted to learn an editor that is Open Source (so I don’t lose my time learning a tool that can be killed), cross platform (so I can use it everywhere), and powerful enough (so I won’t regret TextMate). For these reasons, Vim has always been the editor I wanted to learn, but it took me several years before I did it in a way that works for me. I tried to switch progressively, using the Janus Vim distribution for a few months, then got back to using TextMate 2 for a time, waiting for the next attempt… here is what finally worked for me.
Original gist with comments: https://gist.github.com/bpierre/0a0025d348b6001394e0
| #!/bin/sh | |
| STAGED_FILES=$(git diff --cached --name-only --diff-filter=ACM | grep ".jsx\{0,1\}$") | |
| if [[ "$STAGED_FILES" = "" ]]; then | |
| exit 0 | |
| fi | |
| PASS=true |
Custom recipe to get OS X 10.10 Yosemite running from scratch, setup applications and developer environment. I use this gist to keep track of the important software and steps required to have a functioning system after a semi-annual fresh install. On average, I reinstall each computer from scratch every 6 months, and I do not perform upgrades between distros.
This keeps the system performing at top speeds, clean of trojans, spyware, and ensures that I maintain good organizational practices for my content and backups. I highly recommend this.
You are encouraged to fork this and modify it to your heart's content to match your own needs.
| #!/bin/sh | |
| # | |
| # Based on http://nrocco.github.io/2012/04/19/git-pre-commit-hook-for-PHP.html post | |
| # | |
| # Do not forget to: chmod +x .git/hooks/pre-commit | |
| BAD_PHP_WORDS='var_dump|die|todo' | |
| BAD_TWIG_WORDS='{{ dump(.*) }}' | |
| EXITCODE=0 |
| define(function(require) { | |
| var React = require('react'); | |
| var paramRegex = /__(\d)+/; | |
| var parser = new DOMParser(); | |
| var errorDoc = parser.parseFromString('INVALID', 'text/xml'); | |
| var errorNs = errorDoc.getElementsByTagName("parsererror")[0].namespaceURI; | |
| // turns the array of string parts into a DOM | |
| // throws if the result is an invalid XML document. |
| var HEADER_NAME = 'MyApp-Handle-Errors-Generically'; | |
| var specificallyHandleInProgress = false; | |
| angular.module('myApp').factory('RequestsErrorHandler', ['$q', function($q) { | |
| return { | |
| // --- The user's API for claiming responsiblity for requests --- | |
| specificallyHandled: function(specificallyHandledBlock) { | |
| specificallyHandleInProgress = true; | |
| try { | |
| return specificallyHandledBlock(); |
(by @andrestaltz)
If you prefer to watch video tutorials with live-coding, then check out this series I recorded with the same contents as in this article: Egghead.io - Introduction to Reactive Programming.
Strongly opinionated set of guides to quickly setup OS X Mavericks for web development. By default OS X hides stuff that normal people don't need to see. These settings are better defaults for developers.
I don't want: any sounds, annoying confirmation dialogs, hidden extensions, superflous animations, unnecessary things running like Dashboard, Notification center or Dock(Alfred/spotlight works better for me).
These are my opinions. Read this document through and pick up the good parts to your preferences.