(E:strip) has sort of changed for me in the past couple months as more of a personal referencing and note-taking environment. (e:Paul) told me that wildcard searching and grepping could be a likely feature in the near future, so I am pretty excited about how else I can push (e:strip)'s limits.
I started some experimentation with establishing habits through journalling a couple years back but that wasn't so very successful. My "goals" category is littered with decapitated angels of change. I think I murdered them all because I lacked the correct motivation. I think I have it now. The thing is I tried the urdhva dhanurasana just now and could not repeat the success at yoga class from last week. So frustrating! And I pretty much know why. I really really really would like some functional muscles on my arms. They are weak and a complete disgrace to the 13,550,471,400+ human arms on the planet. They have no muscle definition and look like they were grafted on me from an early 1700s graveyard-spare-bones-and-cadavers-department.
So push ups it is. At 10:13 PM everyday, as many push-ups as I can do in 5-10 minutes. (I can't do a "real" push-up yet so I am going to start with push-ups-on-my-knees.)
Of course, now how does (e:strip) come into it? I am not sure yet... maybe a post checking in on success or failure immediately after I finish the task? They say that if you keep it up for 21 days, a habit is established (personally, I think that is such tripe... but I could be wrong. I kind of want to be wrong on this one.) Who wants to be in my accountability peanut gallery and throw rocks? Or better still, does someone else have a 10:13 or even 10:31 goal they want to implement? Brush your teeth every night, perhaps?
A single push-up for me, a giant floss for you? It's project Armstrong!
See you around 10:30-ish.
Tinypliny's Journal
My Podcast Link
07/17/2011 14:33 #54716
Project ArmstrongCategory: goals
07/16/2011 13:38 #54713
Greppetty GrepCategory: linux
Another set of commands I need to burn into my brain:
Find all files in the current directory that contain blah in their file names
Wildcards in grep: all files that start with a b and end in a g with ONLY one character in between
The asterisk * in a grep command stands for repetition. .* means "repeat any character any number of times"
Escaping characters. Preceding backslashes either remove an implied special meaning from a character or add special meaning to a "non-special" character
An expression consisting of a character followed by an escaped question mark matches one or zero instances of that character.
An expression surrounded by "escaped parentheses" is treated as a single character.
Match a selection of characters, use []
The [] may be used to search for non-matches. This is done by putting a carat ^ as the first character inside the square brackets.
matches (hello)a, (aksjdhaksj d ka)a But not
x=(y+2(x+1))a (I don't get this part, does it match (y+2(x+1))a?)
This matches phone numbers, possibly containing a dash or whitespace in the middle.
The $ character matches the end of the line. The ^ character matches the beginning of the line.
The expression consisting of two expressions seperated by the or operator \| matches lines containing either of those two expressions.
The expression \n where n is a number, matches the contents of the n'th set of parentheses in the expression
"Mr \(dog\|cat\) came home to Mrs \1 and they went to visit Mr \(dog\|cat\) and Mrs \2 to discuss the meaning of life matches the respective dog/cat pairs
The following characters are considered special and need to be "escaped":
? \ . [ ] ^ $
A $ sign loses its meaning if characters follow it and the carat ^ loses its meaning if other characters precede it.
Square brackets behave a little differently. The rules for square brackets go as follows:
Find with specific strings on filenames
Look for specific filetypes
Find by size:
Find by last modified time (last 1 day)
-atime: when the file was last accessed
-ctime: when the file's permissions were last changed
-mtime: when the file's data was last modified
-amin: when (in minutes) the file was last accessed
-cmin: when (in minutes) the file's permissions were last changed
-mmin: when (in minutes) the file's data was last modified
!
exclude everything that comes after this...
Collect files that are not owned by valid users and delete them
Clean the images off of your *nix desktop
Correct the permissions on your web directory
Show a list of files in /etc that have been modified since last month
Refs (~completely taken with gratitude from)
Find all files in the current directory that contain blah in their file names
- ls |grep blah
Wildcards in grep: all files that start with a b and end in a g with ONLY one character in between
- grep b.g file
The asterisk * in a grep command stands for repetition. .* means "repeat any character any number of times"
- grep "b.*g" file
Escaping characters. Preceding backslashes either remove an implied special meaning from a character or add special meaning to a "non-special" character
- grep 'hello\.gif' file
An expression consisting of a character followed by an escaped question mark matches one or zero instances of that character.
- bugg\?y matches bugy , buggy but not bugggy
An expression surrounded by "escaped parentheses" is treated as a single character.
- Fred\(eric\)\? Smith matches Fred Smith or Frederic Smith
Match a selection of characters, use []
- [Hh]ello matches lines containing hello or Hello
- [A-Ca-k] is the same as [ABCabcdefghijk]
- [[:alpha:]] is the same as [a-zA-Z]
- [[:upper:]] is the same as [A-Z]
- [[:lower:]] is the same as [a-z]
- [[:digit:]] is the same as [0-9]
- [[:alnum:]] is the same as [0-9a-zA-Z]
- [[:space:]] matches any white space including tabs
The [] may be used to search for non-matches. This is done by putting a carat ^ as the first character inside the square brackets.
- grep "([^()]*)a"
matches (hello)a, (aksjdhaksj d ka)a But not
x=(y+2(x+1))a (I don't get this part, does it match (y+2(x+1))a?)
This matches phone numbers, possibly containing a dash or whitespace in the middle.
- grep "[[:digit:]]\{3\}[ -]\?[[:digit:]]\{4\}" file
The $ character matches the end of the line. The ^ character matches the beginning of the line.
- grep "^From.*mscharmi" /var/spool/mail/elflord
- grep "^[[:space:]]*hello[[:space:]]*$" file
The expression consisting of two expressions seperated by the or operator \| matches lines containing either of those two expressions.
- grep "I am a \(cat\|dog\)" matches lines containing the string "I am a cat" or the string "I am a dog"
The expression \n where n is a number, matches the contents of the n'th set of parentheses in the expression
"Mr \(dog\|cat\) came home to Mrs \1 and they went to visit Mr \(dog\|cat\) and Mrs \2 to discuss the meaning of life matches the respective dog/cat pairs
The following characters are considered special and need to be "escaped":
? \ . [ ] ^ $
A $ sign loses its meaning if characters follow it and the carat ^ loses its meaning if other characters precede it.
Square brackets behave a little differently. The rules for square brackets go as follows:
- A closing square bracket loses its special meaning if placed first in a list. for example []12] matches ] , 1, or 2.
- A dash - loses it's usual meaning inside lists if it is placed last.
- A carat ^ loses it's special meaning if it is not placed first
- Most special characters lose their meaning inside square brackets
- grep "$HOME" file searches file for the name of your home directory, while
- grep '$HOME' file searches for the string $HOME
Find with specific strings on filenames
- find . -name "*.jpg"
- find . -iname "*.jpg" #case insenstive version
Look for specific filetypes
- find . -type d #directories
- find . -type f #files
- find . -type l #links (wth?)
- find . -type s #sockets (wth?)
Find by size:
- find ~/Movies/ -size +1024M
Find by last modified time (last 1 day)
- find /etc/ -user root -mtime 1
-atime: when the file was last accessed
-ctime: when the file's permissions were last changed
-mtime: when the file's data was last modified
-amin: when (in minutes) the file was last accessed
-cmin: when (in minutes) the file's permissions were last changed
-mmin: when (in minutes) the file's data was last modified
!
exclude everything that comes after this...
Collect files that are not owned by valid users and delete them
- find / -nouser -print0 | xargs -0 rm
Clean the images off of your *nix desktop
- find ~/Desktop -name "*.jpg" -o -name "*.gif" -o -name "*.png" -print0 | xargs -0 mv --target-directory ~/Pictures
- The -print0 option terminates results with a null character instead of the default newline, making it cleaner and less likely to balk in many cases
Correct the permissions on your web directory
- find /your/webdir/ -type d -print0 | xargs -0 chmod 755
- find /your/webdir -type f | xargs chmod 644
Show a list of files in /etc that have been modified since last month
- find /etc -mtime -30
Refs (~completely taken with gratitude from)
07/16/2011 11:37 #54712
We are the Custard Pie Appreciation Consortium!Category: music
This gem by The Kinks is SO (e:matthew). haha
(But I love the Kate Rusby version a lot!)
She infuses something indescribably rustic and precise into the classic.
The already super-awesome Classic:
We are the Skyscraper Condemnation Affiliates
God save Tudor houses, antique tables, and billiards!
(But I love the Kate Rusby version a lot!)
She infuses something indescribably rustic and precise into the classic.
The already super-awesome Classic:
07/16/2011 10:32 #54711
Candara and Droid SansCategory: i-tech
Welcome to my Candara and Droid Sans Obsession. I am completely sold on these fonts.
Candara
Droid Sans
Love the way the letters curve, everything about these fonts is so perfect.
Candara is native to windows and droid sans is native to Android. But I want them both on both of my windows and linux systems. So here goes:
Installing both fonts on Linux.
From:
Installing droid fonts on Windows.
This is way simpler.
While hunting for stuff, I found this, a complete image of a running android system ripe for hacking.
Hmm...
Candara
Droid Sans
Love the way the letters curve, everything about these fonts is so perfect.
Candara is native to windows and droid sans is native to Android. But I want them both on both of my windows and linux systems. So here goes:
Installing both fonts on Linux.
From:
- Copy the fonts in their own folders under /usr/share/fonts/truetype
- Make these fonts available to the system: chmod 0775 -R droid/ candara/
- Cache the fonts so they are loaded on all the applications: chmod 0775 -R candara/ droid/
Installing droid fonts on Windows.
This is way simpler.
While hunting for stuff, I found this, a complete image of a running android system ripe for hacking.
Hmm...
07/16/2011 09:53 #54710
The TermKit PhilosophyCategory: linux
I read with interest this nifty commentary by Steven Wittens on his extreme redesign of the concept of the bland linux terminal.
From:
And I can't help laughing. How true.
I would love this on my system. I think it's still in development (on not). It's SO confusing to find out what's good to install and what isn't on linux sometimes...
I also want the CLICompanion: But again, is there a Debian port? or isn't there? Who knows... See the confusion here? Basic questions like "Alright, can I install this application now?" grow into gargantuan complex flowcharts on linux. For eg. the simple question above can only be answered after ALL the following have been sorted.
Fine then, you can install the program but... I can only give you the source code because I am SO open source. Here you go, my precious tarball lovingly gift-wrapped in some cryptic archival format for you: Sourcecodeblablaobscureversion000.tar.bz
Which leads to:
God forbid, you find an easy way to do things on Linux. Because you see, the great Linus Torvalds didn't plan on the system being used and abused by novices and nobodies like you.
One of the Unix principles is nobly called "Least Surprise", but in practice, from having observed new Unix users, I think it often becomes "Maximum Confusion".
From:
And I can't help laughing. How true.
I would love this on my system. I think it's still in development (on not). It's SO confusing to find out what's good to install and what isn't on linux sometimes...
I also want the CLICompanion: But again, is there a Debian port? or isn't there? Who knows... See the confusion here? Basic questions like "Alright, can I install this application now?" grow into gargantuan complex flowcharts on linux. For eg. the simple question above can only be answered after ALL the following have been sorted.
- What distro are you on?
- What kernel are you on?
- What architecture are you on?
- What are the dependencies of the program you want?
- What are the versions of these dependencies specific to the program you want to install?
- Do you have the source repository of the versions of the dependencies that is best suited to the program in your sources.list?
- Do you have an updated sources.list?
Fine then, you can install the program but... I can only give you the source code because I am SO open source. Here you go, my precious tarball lovingly gift-wrapped in some cryptic archival format for you: Sourcecodeblablaobscureversion000.tar.bz
Which leads to:
- Can you compile this source code on your system?
- What are the developer tools you need to compile the code?
- What are the dependencies of the developer tools you need?
- Are these dependencies in the repositories on your sources.list?
- Do you have the requisite linux kernel headers (what the hell does that even mean?)
God forbid, you find an easy way to do things on Linux. Because you see, the great Linus Torvalds didn't plan on the system being used and abused by novices and nobodies like you.
One of the reasons I think you can get there is I've seen this group called the Peking Acrobats and maybe some other group on TV somewhere. The body control they have is amazing things where like they walk on there hands and get them to go past there feet and then raise up the feet and balance (of course starting at age infant helps the body learn all of that).... Yes everyone has certain abilities and strengths and weaknesses ...... But those can be improved and worked on .... Now where the limit is whom knows really
Thanks, (e:metalpeter). You are probably the one who thinks I will get *there*. Wish I had your confidence. ;-)
I wish you luck with this..... What ever the task is learning to crawl, walk, ride a bike, walk a balance beam once you don't once means you can do it but mastery and making it so you can do it all the time is something else.... You will get there.....
YOU ARE BACK. At the risk of sounds ever so stalkerish... OMG, YOU ARE BACK. I have missed you.
You should take pictures of your arms so we can watch them grow.