n01senet.blogspot.com
n01senet: regex engine timing charts
http://n01senet.blogspot.com/2007/05/regex-engine-timing-charts.html
Regex engine timing charts. Charts by Google Spreadsheets. Taller columns are worse):. Para; 7:15 PM Tuesday, May 08, 2007 by Chouser. Regular expression is really wonderful to parsing HTML or matching pattern. I use this a lot when i code. Actually when I learn any new langauge, first of all I first try whether it supports regex or not. I feel ezee when I found that. Http:/ icfun.blogspot.com/2008/04/ruby-regular-expression-handling.html. A community blog by the members of n01se.net.
n01senet.blogspot.com
n01senet: Ubuntu java plugin on Debian Lenny amd64
http://n01senet.blogspot.com/2008/03/ubuntu-java-plugin-on-debian-lenny.html
Ubuntu java plugin on Debian Lenny amd64. Things I tried today:. Apt-get install sun-java6-jre; no plugin included. Apt-get install sun-java5-jre; no plugin inculded. Apt-get install ia32-sun-java6-bin nspluginwrapper; this combination doesn't work because Java uses the OJI plugin API instead of the NPAPI that nspluginwrapper supports. Finally, thanks to Dave Medberry's suggestion, I downloaded the Ubuntu Blackdown amd64 package from http:/ packages.ubuntu.com/hardy/j2re1.4.
n01senet.blogspot.com
n01senet: July 2007
http://n01senet.blogspot.com/2007_07_01_archive.html
How to use a custom theme in rx4rdf. I've started experimenting with rx4rdf. And although there are more useful things I could do first, I started trying to replace the default visual theme with a custom one just for n01se.net. After much stumbling around, I found what I needed to add to the site-config.py. File in order for my own XSLT (really RxSLT. Stylesheets to work. First I used addItem to make rx4rdf aware of the two new stylesheet files, and how to treat each of them:. AddRxML (replace = '@siteva...
n01senet.blogspot.com
n01senet: Why you want macros (even if you don't know it yet)
http://n01senet.blogspot.com/2008/03/why-you-want-macros-even-if-you-dont.html
Why you want macros (even if you don't know it yet). This is a slightly edited transcript of a conversation with my friend Brian. Let's say you want to write your own "or" function. Let's say you're not satisfied with C 's. Because you want the actual value that is true, not just the boolean "true". You want to be able to say:. QString x = y "default";. And to make things easy, let's not worry about the goofy operator syntax. You'd be happy with:. QString x = my or( y, "default" );. Oops, I just evaluated.
n01senet.blogspot.com
n01senet: February 2008
http://n01senet.blogspot.com/2008_02_01_archive.html
Clojure is the best lisp yet. I've dabbled in a few lisp dialects, but I generally become frustrated with some deficiency or other. I had been holding out some hope for Paul Graham's arc. But when I tried it out, I wasn't exactly blown away. Many lisps have a shocking shortage of useful library modules for common tasks, especially related to networking or particular file formats, when compared to Perl, Python, etc., and creating bindings for existing C or other native libraries can be pretty tricky&#...
n01senet.blogspot.com
n01senet: May 2006
http://n01senet.blogspot.com/2006_05_01_archive.html
Blogger requires me to make a post before I can preview the template or subscribe to the RSS feed. Is this fair enough or lame to the max? Para; 3:04 PM Saturday, May 20, 2006 by Aaron. A community blog by the members of n01se.net.
n01senet.blogspot.com
n01senet: clojure is the best lisp yet
http://n01senet.blogspot.com/2008/02/clojure-is-best-lisp-yet.html
Clojure is the best lisp yet. I've dabbled in a few lisp dialects, but I generally become frustrated with some deficiency or other. I had been holding out some hope for Paul Graham's arc. But when I tried it out, I wasn't exactly blown away. Many lisps have a shocking shortage of useful library modules for common tasks, especially related to networking or particular file formats, when compared to Perl, Python, etc., and creating bindings for existing C or other native libraries can be pretty tricky&#...
n01senet.blogspot.com
n01senet: experimenting with vnc
http://n01senet.blogspot.com/2008/02/experimenting-with-vnc.html
My home setup consists of a server in the basement with thin clients. In the upstairs office. I love this setup because it means the office is entirely solid state; no fans or disks to make noise. It's the ultimate silent PC. Gdmconf.dpkg-dist 2007-05-29 05:08:37.000000000 -0400 gdm.conf 2008-02-07 09:56:42.000000000 -0500 @ -59,2 59,3 @ [xdmcp] Enable=true @ -74,2 75,3 @ [servers] 0=inactive. And on the thin client, in /etc/rc.local:. Here's what I did to make this work. First the server, I install.