Interests: Regular Expressions, Linux CLI one-liners, Scripting Languages and Vim
Why do you think it is a phishing link? Gumroad is a well known platform to sell digital goods.
I mention it is free up to some date because it will go back to being a paid product after that.
Not my blog, just sharing it here.
That said, I don’t see that broken rectangle on Chromium.
Is it regex or sed/awk syntax (or both) that gives you trouble?
I had similar reaction and didn’t even try to learn them for years - then I caught the stackoverflow craze of answering CLI questions (and learning from others).
oxipng, pngquant and svgcleaner for optimizing images
auto-editor for removing silent portions from video recordings
Not my blog, just sharing it here. Saw it on HN (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=40419325)
Check out https://novelwriter.io/
I’m not familiar with such softwares (I use pandoc for technical writing), but might help you…
See also: https://github.com/pllk/cphb (Competitive Programmer’s Handbook)
I have a list of curated resources here: https://learnbyexample.github.io/py_resources/
There are sections for beginners, intermediate, advanced, etc. Also included are exercises, projects, debugging, testing, and many more stuff. Hope it helps :)
I use GitHub pages and mdbook (https://github.com/rust-lang/mdBook)
GVim.
Check out https://ghostwriter.kde.org/ if you are looking for a GUI app with live preview, full screen mode, etc.
If he likes games, check out “Invent Your Own Computer Games with Python”: https://inventwithpython.com/invent4thed/
If you are looking for books, check out:
Intermediate:
Advanced:
You can do it in Bash as well. Put this in .inputrc
:
"\e[A":history-substring-search-backward
"\e[B":history-substring-search-forward
# or, if you want to search only from the start of the command
"\e[A": history-search-backward
"\e[B": history-search-forward
I start my search string with stackoverflow
as a workaround.
See also:
Another highly recommended free course is Python Programming by University of Helsinki
I have a list of learning resources for CLI tools and scripting here: https://learnbyexample.github.io/curated_resources/linux_cli_scripting.html
I’ve also written a few TUI interactive apps to practice text processing commands like grep, sed, awk, coreutils, etc: https://github.com/learnbyexample/TUI-apps