It looks like English isn’t the author’s first language, but the guide is still pretty good at providing a broad overview of Linux topics a beginner would want to be aware of.
Link: An Introduction to Unix
http://www.oliverelliott.org/article/computing/tut_unix/
Ummmm… the introduction to An Introduction to Unix contains a link to a YouTube video of N.W.A.’s F*** tha Police. I haven’t read all of the the guide, but that should give you some idea of what might lurk behind the links. You have been warned.
Composer: Dependency Manager for PHP
GRPC: Open Source RPC framework built on HTTP/2 with libraries in 10 languages
- GRPC has libraries in C, C++, Java, Go, Node.js, Python, Ruby, Objective-C, PHP and C#.
- Define services using Protocol Buffers.
Front end Developer Interview Questions
Github repo with all of the questions: https://github.com/h5bp/Front-end-Developer-Interview-Questions ᔥ
Blog post with some questions: http://darcyclarke.me/development/front-end-job-interview-questions/
Ninja: Java full stack web development framework
http://www.ninjaframework.org/
Check out the Ninja home page for a list of the framework’s features. it looks like a relatively simple framework for building webapps in Java.
jOOQ: Full-featured, Java SQL-centric (non-ORM) database library
Github page: https://github.com/jOOQ/jOOQ
Example 1:
create.selectFrom(BOOK)
.where(BOOK.PUBLISHED_IN.eq(2011))
.orderBy(BOOK.TITLE)
Example 2:
create.select(AUTHOR.FIRST_NAME, AUTHOR.LAST_NAME, count())
.from(AUTHOR)
.join(BOOK).on(AUTHOR.ID.equal(BOOK.AUTHOR_ID))
.where(BOOK.LANGUAGE.eq("DE"))
.and(BOOK.PUBLISHED.gt(date("2008-01-01")))
.groupBy(AUTHOR.FIRST_NAME, AUTHOR.LAST_NAME)
.having(count().gt(5))
.orderBy(AUTHOR.LAST_NAME.asc().nullsFirst())
.limit(2)
.offset(1)
Type-safety example:
select().from(t).where(t.a.eq(select(t2.x).from(t2));
// Type-check here: ---------------> ^^^^
select().from(t).where(t.a.eq(any(select(t2.x).from(t2)));
// Type-check here: -------------------> ^^^^
select().from(t).where(t.a.in(select(t2.x).from(t2));
// Type-check here: ---------------> ^^^^
Cgrep: Source code search tool (similar to ack) written in C
- Multi-threaded with configurable number of jobs.
- Blazing fast: Running on a single core it is nearly as fast as GNU grep, up to 6x times faster than ack.
- Multi-line pattern searches.
- Colors highlight of tokens and strings matching.
- Recursive searches: Support of language filters and pruning directories.
- Standard searches: through Boyer–Moore and Posix Regex.
- Code Tokenizer: Searches as prefix, infix, suffix and edit distance (Levenshtein distance).
- Context-aware filters distinguish among code, comments and literals in different languages.
- Languages support for Awk, C, Cpp, Chapel, Coffee, Csharp, Css, CMake, D, Erlang, Fsharp, Go, Haskell, Html, Java, Javascript, Latex, Lua, Make, OCaml, ObjectiveC, Perl, PHP, Python, Ruby, Scala, Tcl, Text, Shell, Verilog, VHDL, Vim.
- Semantic searches through wildcards and combinators. _, _1, _2…, $, $1, $2…, ANY, KEY, STR, CHR, NUM, HEX, OCT, OR. E.g. “_1(_1 && $)” search for move constructors, “struct OR class _ { OR : OR <” search for class declarations.
- Customizable output with custom format string, XML and JSON back-ends.
jq: Command-line JSON processor written in portable C that can be downloaded as a single binary
From the jq website:
jq is like sed for JSON data – you can use it to slice and filter and map and transform structured data with the same ease that sed, awk, grep and friends let you play with text.