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I was told once there is a book that shows you how to make a database from scratch using sed, awk, and the Linux filesystem. I thought I had the name, but now I cannot find it. What is this book called?
Edit:
My understanding is this book was meant for learning how databases work, and how to build your own entirely from scratch using awk and the filesystem. From how it was explained, you could build your own version of /rdb, then when you finished you could just use /rdb itself, but now you'd know how it was made.
So, at the end of the book, you'd have almost completely remade /rdb yourself.
Is it "Unix Relational Database Management: Application Development in the Unix Environment (/RDB)" http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=013938622X/cbbrownecompu-20/ ?
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Trying to learn Haskell, done some of the basic examples from the well known books but would like to try something more relevant. Found the midi and the Haskore libraries but I can't figure out the basics.
I'd love to see a really simple example of how to load a MIDI file (preferably a format 1 file) and access events in the various tracks.
I highly recommend The Haskell School of Music -- From Signals to Symphonies by Paul Hudak
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How can I do this? I have Package Control installed and I'm running Ubuntu. There are similar questions that detail some faulty plugins, and I'm wondering if this is still the case as of 2014
Check out HTML-CSS-JS Prettify. It requires node.js to work, so make sure you read through the entire README to get your system set up properly. I've been using it for a while, and I really like it. There are lots of configuration options, so you can customize it to your particular needs.
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Does anyone know of any software like Google Docs, or collabedit that allows you to edit realtime collaboratively and even compile a .cpp or other program over the web?
I haven't used this website, but seems like http://codebunk.com/ does the job.
It doesn't work for Java though.
I know of this website that will compile the code for you:
http://ideone.com/
Unfortunately, I cannot help in the real time editing front.
I wrote a little webapp that does exactly that, i.e. it lets you compile Google Docs documents: http://compiler.m01.eu
You can write C++ code into a Google Document (and do that collaboratively if you like), and then click on a bookmark (provided on the site) to compile your code, which will either start the download of your binary or show a compiler error message.
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I have crontabs for many machines, and wanted to see what started when, and to ensure load on the database server would be fine. Is there a tool that either converts crontab entries to iCal, or a tool that directly does visualization?
I don't have a great cron specific answer for this but in case its helpful there are alternative schedulers which give you more information about the running jobs from a central view, something like Cisco's Tidal Scheduler
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I'm curious if anyone is using any web app that is extremely simple (very few lines of code). Something that helps you with something practical in your daily life? I'm learning JavaScript and I would like to see examples so that I can build my own, but I want it to be useful so I feel motivated enough to build it.
The d3 page has some awesome examples of really neat yet simple applications: http://mbostock.github.com/d3/