bearassbear.blogspot.com
Download the World: August 2010
http://bearassbear.blogspot.com/2010_08_01_archive.html
It turns out that the Calvin and Hobbes complete collection makes the perfect "table" for a two player game of skip bo. Win. Links to this post. Looks like i need a new camera. Links to this post. Links to this post. Subscribe to: Posts (Atom). It turns out that the Calvin and Hobbes complete . Looks like i need a new camera. Have fun. Be nice. Do something. Read something. Play something. View my complete profile. Travel template. Powered by Blogger.
bearassbear.blogspot.com
Download the World: May 2013
http://bearassbear.blogspot.com/2013_05_01_archive.html
I haven't posted in a long time, but today I did something that will likely be useful again. It also can definitely be improved upon, so if you find this and know what I might want to do differently, then speak up. It parses html into a clojure tree which it can then walk, stripping the plain text as it goes. You can define how you want to replace specific tags and entities, or black list tags you want to ignore completely. Links to this post. Subscribe to: Posts (Atom). View my complete profile.
bearassbear.blogspot.com
Download the World: OM Life and Benchwarmer
http://bearassbear.blogspot.com/2014/11/om-life-and-benchwarmer.html
OM Life and Benchwarmer. With Holidays come days off, so I had a chance to explore OM and core.async in ClojureScript. First, I created a simple scoreboard sans timer, to keep track of various states in a structure like this:. With the scoreboard driven by events put on a core.async channel, I had the idea to test the state changes with an event generator:. The rendered results were kind of humorous: BenchWarmer. The results ended up a lot faster than my last attempt. Check out the project on github.
bearassbear.blogspot.com
Download the World: December 2008
http://bearassbear.blogspot.com/2008_12_01_archive.html
I'm looking for a code highlighter for my other blog that has python syntax highlighting. i plan to post a lot more code snippets on there. I thought google might have something so i was checking out my old blogger. guess not. Links to this post. Subscribe to: Posts (Atom). Have fun. Be nice. Do something. Read something. Play something. View my complete profile. Travel template. Powered by Blogger.
bearassbear.blogspot.com
Download the World: December 2007
http://bearassbear.blogspot.com/2007_12_01_archive.html
Fossils suggest whales evolved from tiny deer-like creatures. Does anyone think that some of the creatures that are only 'known' because of fossils could be in the imagination of some paleontologist who didn't actually find all the 'pieces' for which he was looking? Links to this post. I have a theory. I don't think so. It's a secret, because the place sucks, and nobody cares. Links to this post. Subscribe to: Posts (Atom). I have a theory. View my complete profile. Travel template. Powered by Blogger.
bearassbear.blogspot.com
Download the World: clojure map-keys
http://bearassbear.blogspot.com/2010/11/clojure-map-keys.html
Someone in #clojure was asking about how to case-insensitively check the keys of a map. The best answer anyone present at the time came up with was pre-processing the map by naming, lowering, and keywordifying the keywords. We then found out the asker was looking for keys in nested maps, so I wrote a function for that. After writing the function I realized I could extract the lowering function and let it take a function to apply to all keys of m and all keys in m's vals. Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom).
bearassbear.blogspot.com
Download the World: November 2014
http://bearassbear.blogspot.com/2014_11_01_archive.html
OM Life and Benchwarmer. With Holidays come days off, so I had a chance to explore OM and core.async in ClojureScript. First, I created a simple scoreboard sans timer, to keep track of various states in a structure like this:. With the scoreboard driven by events put on a core.async channel, I had the idea to test the state changes with an event generator:. The rendered results were kind of humorous: BenchWarmer. The results ended up a lot faster than my last attempt. Check out the project on github.
bearassbear.blogspot.com
Download the World: March 2010
http://bearassbear.blogspot.com/2010_03_01_archive.html
Flickr: jabella's stuff tagged with balloonlaunch. I totally want to do this. Flickr: jabella's stuff tagged with balloonlaunch. I've noticed that I share more links than anyone. Either that, or none of my friends allow me to see links they've shared in the privacy settings. But it makes me wonder, why would my friends read so many uninteresting things? If it's interesting, share it. Please? Links to this post. My Desk At Work. Links to this post. Subscribe to: Posts (Atom). My Desk At Work.
bearassbear.blogspot.com
Download the World: September 2010
http://bearassbear.blogspot.com/2010_09_01_archive.html
I constantly am looking for a better way to write my functions. I want them to be fast, flexible and readable. However, in the fast department, I also want to write them fast. Tradeoffs are always made in programming. It hit me recently to optimize my optimizations. That is, focus my optimization on the things used the most. Now I can move on, but while I'm working on optimizing things that happen every second, what do you think of this approach? Am I caring too little? Should I be concerned of anything?