To recap, the minified version of <code>flatmap-stream</code> version 0.1.1 (and possibly 0.1.2) contained obfuscated and encrypted malicious code. The code is was intended to decrypt only when a package with the description "A Secure Bitcoin Wallet" was installed as a dependency. Effectively, they were targeting the users of <code>copay</code> (open source bitcoin wallet) and its derivatives.
If both packages were installed, the malicious code would try to steal the user's bitcoins.
this doesn't *exactly* answer your question, but this library found solves a more general problem of navigating to previous cursor locations. I use https://libraries.io/emacs/backward-forward:
(add-hook 'prog-mode-hook #'backward-forward-mode)
(global-set-key (kbd "C-<left>") 'backward-forward-previous-location)
(global-set-key (kbd "C-<right>") 'backward-forward-next-location)
They appear to be indexing every file in every go repository as though it is a separate project.
e.g.: github.com/docker/docker/pkg/networkfs/etchosts
is a project.
I work on a web app that has 600k lines of JS. Actually it is mostly Typescript now. We are pretty sure that the future of our rendering pipeline (already using WebGL in TS) is WASM.
Here's a little comparison project one of our engineers whipped up:
https://libraries.io/github/sessamekesh/wasm-3d-animation-demo
The future is WASM.
Using npm outdated
to see libraries that you can update or use https://libraries.io to get notifications that something has been updated.
And when you know something has been updated, that you go to their repo to look at the changelog to see if there are any major changes and more importantly: breaking changes that you need to be aware of. Though when a major version has been released i find it often to be a wise choice to wait for the first update on that to fix some bugs first.
And when you update that you first test it locally before committing because you wouldn't be the first one to crash the whole pipeline because some version is not working properly on every system yet.
It has an embedded go get command, which can download a library from github and can be used as a package manager. So this website thinks that any Go library on github is a package and counts all the forks as different packages.
As an example, docker has been forked 11k times and has multiple Go packages in a single repo. A search for a single subpackage of docker yields 522 results, most of which are forks:
https://libraries.io/search?q=docker%2Fpkg%2Fmount&platforms=Go&sort=
Looks like they bumped the size limit to allow opencv native dependencies.
I don't think Maven Central has a size limit, and you can deploy there from lein. Looks like that's the approach taken here for packaging a 141mb soundfont. If I pull the windows-specific lbs you need for the libraries you listed, and a couple that popped up at runtime, I get a 102mb archive with simple zip compression (what a jar would do with native deps assumably). That's only for windows though.
So to have cross-platform native deps (desirable), the deps would need to be broken up into smaller chunks, or a larger file would be hosted, or there would be separate dependencies based on OS (maybe undesirable).
I'm not saying these are more desirable than offloading the responsibility for MKL installation to the user the system.
There is no longer a way to pirate books off Scribd.
There used to be a python script called scribd-downloader which worked with your Scribd premium credentials but it's been taken down from github. You can find old documentation of it here: https://libraries.io/github/ritiek/scribd-downloader
It seems that your comment contains 1 or more links that are hard to tap for mobile users. I will extend those so they're easier for our sausage fingers to click!
Here is link number 1 - Previous text "px"
^Please ^PM ^/u/eganwall ^with ^issues ^or ^feedback! ^| ^Delete
The crashplan app is not available from the app center anymore, at least not in mine. I did find a thread that mentioned it working on 4.3.3 but I'm not sure about 4.3.4. I was able to find the qpkg here but it hasn't been updated since November and it mentions Crashplan's older plans and encryption techniques in the description. I was hoping someone might have dealt with this before me and be able to share their results :D
The best side-projects are the ones that gets used by other people. So, IMO, this is what I consider the best order to consider in evaluating what you should build:
1) Open source contributions to a popular project
2) Open source contributions to unknown, yet highly important infrastructure
3) Projects that make you an income (even if it's brief or small)
4) Projects that don't make you an income, but do get you users
5) Projects that had a 15-minutes of fame on social media
6) Or, finally projects that emphasize, at the very least, a specific skill that you're listing on your resume.
Options #3, #4, and #5, are the hardest to do, but they're huge for a resume if you can pull it off.
For most of us, options #1 and #6 are what you want to shoot for.
I'd be keen to try this.
In the past I think I had gnus configured to read the reddit RSS feed. It was ok, but you needed to then click to a browser link for each thread.
Update: https://libraries.io/github/paul-issartel/nnreddit nnreddit is read only, so I'm not sure it would be much better than subscribing to the RSS feed of each sub. https://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/GnusRss
Further Update: nnreddit didn't work for me. I believe the reddit feed is an atom feed, but the conversion described on the emacs wiki page didn't work for me. Gnus reported no items in the feed.
Final Update: What did work was to get the RSS feed of my front page from here. https://www.reddit.com/prefs/feeds/
The install elfeed (package-install elfeed), then (elfeed-add-feed)
Not bad way to look at reddit and very quick between articles.
I'm biased but...
Just did with a simple query:
I don't even claim to have very relevant results yet. This is something that I will work on a lot in the coming weeks when I'm done with the interface. I'm thinking of integrating artificial intelligence in the ranking system. Anything that I can do to get better results actually. I'm pretty serious about this.
I really want to make a killer search engine for libraries and I think what we have already is not enough.
The points I want to focus on are:
Taking another quick pass and adding on to what the others have said (in order of most importance to me):
I have a couple other small nits but I'd prioritize the above for now.
Not really - python is very general purpose and a lot of the wealth of python comes from using data structures so simple checks won't hold much value.
There's a few things you can do to work around this. assert
is a good keyword for quick tests. Or you could look for some external libraries such as https://libraries.io/pypi/parameters-validation
Honestly though, validation should likely be done as low as possible and communicated back up the stack imo.
Would analyzing the the https://libraries.io/data dataset help?
"Libraries.io gathers data from 36 package managers and 3 source code repositories. We track over 2.7m unique open source packages, 33m repositories and 235m interdependencies between them. This gives Libraries.io a unique understanding of open source software"
https://libraries.io/search?q=qrcode. Such dir eine Programmiersprache und eine Lizenz aus, dir dir zusagen.
> Der Code sollte zeitlich unbegrenzt gültig bleiben.
Ein QR-Code ist eine Zeichenkette kodiert als monochromes 2D-Bild. Außer wir als Menschheit vergessen nach dem 3. Weltkrieg wie man solche Codes liest, wird da nichts mit der Zeit ungültig. Na ja, wenn du den Code ausdruckst, kann er verbleichen, …
Stick with the Asus kit. Merlin can do it..
Get a reliable USB stick. You'll need it for storage.
This script looks like it's what you want to do https://gist.github.com/Jimmy-Z/6120988090b9696c420385e7e42c64c4
And here's a good explanation: https://libraries.io/github/twelve17/merlin-meo-scripts
Else you might want to look for a cheap dual NIC pc and build your own opnsense / pfsense box..
Thanks! I'll take a look at libraries.io but I think I'll be choosing Pinject because "they had me at pythonic".
And using dependency injection to implement the inversion of control principle in python is a real thing. You can see it just by the number of libraries listed in this post trying to implement it. If you have any doubts, the following video sums up the advantages of using it in python and the thoughts of the python community about it: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qkGxy4c64Jg
I second that.
xxHash offers excellent performance, for all sizes of inputs.
It has many ports, including several Rust ports, like the excellent twox-hash by Jake.
Most repositories offer an `xxhash` CLI these days, making it easy to compare and combine with command line.
I'm using technosoft2000 docker image and the button is missing even though I have .mobi and .azw3. Any ideas?
PS. Unfortunately I didn't manage to get linuxserver image to run.
Really? Please point me to a production quality game development library for lisp, i.e. not some random game lib that one guy supported for about a year.
Using a language that most people don't use isn't a good use of my time. Unless I plan on reimplementing everything from scratch, I'll be far more productive with something like C#, Python, Java, etc. because people use them, and there's a ton of libraries.
I've looked into lisp several times for hobby projects, and every time, I eventually just realized I was going to have to rebuild everything from ground up to get anything practical done.
Check out libraries.io.
Go had 1.6 million packages.
Python has in the hundreds of thousands.
Lisp probably has only in the mere thousands.
https://libraries.io/npm/is-odd
According to this, 21 packages depends on is-odd. So that's not a lot.
Though there's also a count of dependent repositories: 71.3K that's a higher number. So yeah.
You are trying to install x64 code on an Arm cpu.
But i see someone has forked it for arm here:
https://libraries.io/github/hypersad/atom-arm
(But it is not going to be easy for you. Maybe you should just use a different editor.)
Hello,You can find Infos for your problem here:https://libraries.io/github/ritiek/scribd-downloaderThere is a column: "Downloading complete textual books and audiobooks" where the use of the credentials-file is explained.
You could try Libraries.io, which has top packages by several different rankings, including number of dependent packages/github repos.
https://libraries.io/github/tylert/packer-build#making-bootable-usb-drives
packer can be used to build ISOs and AMIs this library extends it to make a bootable usb with QEMU
Is the latest version of ITHVNR-3.5584.2-win32?
Is the latest version of Translation Aggregator 2016.09.08.r184?
>This very subreddit has a tutorial under Guides-Text Hookers.
Tried searching for it, couldn't find it, might you have any links, please?
​
I also found this while looking for ITHVNR, any idea if it's good:
https://libraries.io/npm/nexthooker
​
?
It's not the classroom license, it's the student license (individual) read here
>If an organization provides primary and secondary education only (i.e., no high or higher education programs), it shall not be included into the list. Primary and secondary school students usually do not need professional developer tools, and in case they learn some programming, we are glad to offer them Community versions of the tools, which are free to everybody, such as PyCharm Community Edition, etc.)
I mean I can deal with it, it's just painful and time consuming to rewrite some of my resources. And I don't know which features the community edition doesn't have but we're working heavily with flask and sqlite and apparently it doesn't have all the integrated database tools.
Short answer no apart from the lack of developers to create it and whether or not those companies have a published API.
An attempt for Familysearch was made:
> Poiggles - WIP plugin for GRAMPS-FamilySearch integration > > https://github.com/elderamevans/familysearch-gramps
Another person attempted to make one for familysearch but has since removed the code from github
> A Gramps plugin to synchronize your local genealogy database with your FamilySearch account. > > https://libraries.io/github/MaurolepisDreki/Gramps-FamilySearch-sync
Interesting read:
> Importing source from Ancestry or FamilySearch into Gramps automatically? > > https://genealogy.stackexchange.com/questions/1593/importing-source-from-ancestry-or-familysearch-into-gramps-automatically
Use <code>pipenv</code> and check for updates.
Use https://libraries.io/ to email you when certain packages update (this isn't python specific). Pyup.io is very similar.
Start "watching" a github repo for "releases only".
I haven’t reached out to them to ask in quite a while. I inquired back back in early 2017 before I jumped in and order 6 sets and then again in October 2017 right before the hubs were posted on Kickstarter. Up to that point the answer was always yes....they were focusing on Alexa first but would follow with google home and homekit later. I’ve noticed on their page now, it no longer even mentions homekit anywhere where it used to prominently state that it would work with all 3 at some point. I suppose it’s still technically possible the hub could work with homekit...the issue is more about the company dedicating the resources towards it and the more time that goes by the easier I see it being for them to scrap it altogether.
In the meantime, I’m debating on just trying to tap into the hub directly and run python scripts against it using indigo and a homebridge plugin running on my MacBook. This is a last resort super long term scenario that I hope I don’t have to resort to....if they never work with homekit, I’d almost be inclined to just replace them with some that do instead of having to learn to write python and everything else just to find a workaround.
One proven way - Use (s)ftp site watchers (e.g. https://github.com/LDCS/ftpwatcher) to bring incoming files to your disk. For never-before-seen file types, use/write a cleaner to normalize to gzipped hcsv. Generate a golang loader for that hcsv ( 2 minutes using https://libraries.io/go/github.com%2FLDCS%2Fgencsv). Write golang funcs to process as needed, add them to the generated loader code. Output to hcsv again. The filesystem is your database. Scales to hundreds of incoming files of dozens of types using just single-threaded golang.
This project is already up and running on secrethitler.io. the original secrethitler.online github is no longer available as far as I know. .online was made by Kyle Coburn, and this is the only thing I could find: https://libraries.io/github/kylecoburn/secret-hitler
https://libraries.io/github/mounteerie/Agbsave9 Following this tutorial. When I reach the Python scrypt part it closes when I get to a certain point in it and it doesn't create the cia file it's supposed to create
Definitely, though I'd suggest trying to update dependencies when they come out instead of leaving it until a regular review, so as to keep those monumental updates a very rare occurrence.
I tend to pin to ~> 3.1
to permit minor updates and fix any issues with minor updates as soon as possible. To keep on top of major updates, I subscribe to gems on rubygems.org and use its RSS feed. There are also services such as libraries.io and gemnasium.
It's much easier and less risky to make regular, small updates to one or two gems than to try and change the entire dependency set.
I was trying to use https://libraries.io/go/github.com%2Fl2x%2Fdota2api to test this out, but I failed to get any results whatsoever.
Do you know how to make these queries? Because I would like to test the ID thing. if it is obtainable, then it could be useful in case someone does some shady shit like scripting or boosting in game.
edit: seems like you were right anyway as the yasp guy said.
The first one looks like what I need, I'll try that and see how it goes.
Update: canvas-text-wrapper is cool. I combined it with a simple class to generate and cache text offscreen with it, I'll probably put that on github at some point.