ce99be93f9c9

Properly codehilite the projects.
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author Steve Losh <steve@stevelosh.com>
date Fri, 15 Jan 2010 20:04:42 -0500
parents 5aed689b7896
children a6628e0d5710
branches/tags (none)
files content/projects/django-hoptoad.html content/projects/grabtweets.html content/projects/hg-paste.html content/projects/hg-prompt.html content/projects/hgtab.html content/projects/t.html

Changes

--- a/content/projects/django-hoptoad.html	Fri Jan 15 19:52:47 2010 -0500
+++ b/content/projects/django-hoptoad.html	Fri Jan 15 20:04:42 2010 -0500
@@ -40,14 +40,17 @@
 Grab the the django-hoptoad code by cloning the [Mercurial][] repository (or
 just [download the latest version][tip-dl] and unzip it somewhere):
 
+    :::text
     hg clone http://bitbucket.org/sjl/django-hoptoad/
 
 There's a git mirror too if you *really* want it.
 
+    :::text
     git clone git://github.com/sjl/django-hoptoad.git
 
 Once you download it, you can install it in the usual manner:
 
+    :::text
     cd django-hoptoad
     python setup.py install
 
@@ -55,10 +58,12 @@
 Mercurial or git, you can symlink the module into your `site-packages`
 directory instead of using `python setup.py install`:
 
+    :::text
     ln -s /full/path/to/django-hoptoad/hoptoad /full/path/to/site-packages/
 
 To make sure it works you can run:
 
+    :::text
     python -c 'import hoptoad'
 
 [Mercurial]: {{links.mercurial}}
@@ -73,6 +78,7 @@
 First, add the `HoptoadNotifierMiddleware` as the last item in your
 `MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES` setting:
 
+    :::python
     MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES = (
         # ... other middleware classes ...
         'hoptoad.middleware.HoptoadNotifierMiddleware',
@@ -81,6 +87,7 @@
 Next, you'll need to add a `HOPTOAD_API_KEY` setting. You can get the key from
 the Hoptoad project page.
 
+    :::python
     HOPTOAD_API_KEY = 'Your Hoptoad API key.'
 
 Optional Settings
@@ -97,6 +104,7 @@
 it in Hoptoad too. If you want to always notify Hoptoad of errors, even while
 in `DEBUG` mode, add the following setting:
 
+    :::python
     HOPTOAD_NOTIFY_WHILE_DEBUG = True
 
 ### Specify a Default Timeout
@@ -112,6 +120,7 @@
 If you'd like to change that amount you can use the `HOPTOAD_TIMEOUT` setting.
 You **must** be running Python 2.6+ to use this.
 
+    :::python
     HOPTOAD_TIMEOUT = 5
 
 The number is the number of seconds the notifier will wait before timing out.
@@ -124,6 +133,7 @@
 By default Hoptoad will **not** be notified of 404 (page not found) errors. If
 you'd like to change this you'll need to add the following setting:
 
+    :::python
     HOPTOAD_NOTIFY_404 = True
 
 **IMPORTANT**: If you are using Django's `flatpages` app and want to track 404
@@ -134,6 +144,7 @@
 To track 404s while using the `flatpages` app your `MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES`
 setting should look like this:
 
+    :::python
     MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES = (
         # ... other middleware classes ...
         'hoptoad.middleware.HoptoadNotifierMiddleware',
@@ -150,6 +161,7 @@
 By default Hoptoad will **not** be notified of 403 (forbidden) errors. If
 you'd like to change this you'll need to add the following setting:
 
+    :::python
     HOPTOAD_NOTIFY_403 = True
 
 Note:
@@ -162,6 +174,7 @@
 If you'd like to ignore all errors from certain User Agents you can use the
 following setting:
 
+    :::python
     HOPTOAD_IGNORE_AGENTS = ['MSIE 6.0', 'Trident']
 
 If any of the strings in the list appear *anywhere* in the User Agent string,
@@ -170,6 +183,7 @@
 The strings are actually regular expressions, so you can be more specific if
 you like:
 
+    :::python
     HOPTOAD_IGNORE_AGENTS = [r'^Mozilla.*compatible; MSIE \d+\.\d+.*$']
 
 One thing this is useful for (aside from hating on IE) is ignoring errors from
@@ -178,6 +192,7 @@
 
 This would probably be a good starting point for ignoring crawlers:
 
+    :::python
     HOPTOAD_IGNORE_AGENTS = ['Googlebot', 'Yahoo! Slurp', 'YahooSeeker']
 
 Troubleshooting
@@ -187,6 +202,7 @@
 they can determine what's wrong. To enable the tests you'll need to add
 django-hoptoad to your `INSTALLED_APPS` setting:
 
+    :::python
     INSTALLED_APPS = (
         # ... other apps ...
         'hoptoad',
@@ -195,6 +211,7 @@
 
 Once you've done that you can run the unit tests:
 
+    :::text
     python manage.py test hoptoad
 
 **NOTE**: The unit tests are very simple at the moment. I'm working on more,
--- a/content/projects/grabtweets.html	Fri Jan 15 19:52:47 2010 -0500
+++ b/content/projects/grabtweets.html	Fri Jan 15 20:04:42 2010 -0500
@@ -24,6 +24,7 @@
 To install it, you can [download][] the latest version, or clone the Mercurial
 repository:
 
+    :::text
     hg clone http://bitbucket.org/sjl/grabtweets/
 
 You can put it anywhere you like.
@@ -38,6 +39,7 @@
 
 To back up your tweets, run `grabtweets` like this:
 
+    :::console
     $ grabtweets.py -u USERNAME FILE
 
 `grabtweets` will pull down the 200 newest tweets from USERNAME and store them in FILE.
@@ -57,6 +59,7 @@
 
 To print the tweets that `grabtweets` has already backed up, run it like this:
 
+    :::console
     $ grabtweets.py -p FILE
 
 [Python]: {{links.python}}
--- a/content/projects/hg-paste.html	Fri Jan 15 19:52:47 2010 -0500
+++ b/content/projects/hg-paste.html	Fri Jan 15 20:04:42 2010 -0500
@@ -27,10 +27,12 @@
 
 Clone the repository:
 
+    :::text
     hg clone http://bitbucket.org/sjl/hg-paste/
 
 Edit the `[extensions]` section in your `~/.hgrc` file:
 
+    :::ini
     [extensions]
     paste = (path to)/hg-paste/paste.py
 
@@ -39,20 +41,24 @@
 
 To paste a diff of all uncommitted changes in the working directory:
 
+    :::text
     hg paste
 
 To paste the changes that revision `REV` made:
 
+    :::text
     hg paste -r REV
 
 To paste the changes between revisions `REV1` and `REV2`:
 
+    :::text
     hg paste -r REV1:REV2
 
 If any files are specified only those files will be included in the diffs.
 
 Several options can be used to specify more metadata about the paste:
 
+    :::text
     hg paste --user Steve --title 'Progress on feature X' --keep
 
 The pastebin website to use can be specified with `--dest`. Currently only
--- a/content/projects/hg-prompt.html	Fri Jan 15 19:52:47 2010 -0500
+++ b/content/projects/hg-prompt.html	Fri Jan 15 20:04:42 2010 -0500
@@ -33,7 +33,7 @@
 
 Edit the `[extensions]` section in your `~/.hgrc` file:
 
-    :::text
+    :::ini
     [extensions]
     prompt = (path to)/hg-prompt/prompt.py
 
--- a/content/projects/hgtab.html	Fri Jan 15 19:52:47 2010 -0500
+++ b/content/projects/hgtab.html	Fri Jan 15 20:04:42 2010 -0500
@@ -31,28 +31,32 @@
 
 ### OPTION 1: Easy, Ugly
 
-Copy the contents of hgtab-bash.sh into your ~/.bashrc file.
+Copy the contents of `hgtab-bash.sh` into your `~/.bashrc` file.
 
 ### OPTION 2: Harder, Less Ugly
 
-Download hgtab-bash.sh and place the following line somewhere in your
-~/.bashrc file:
+Download `hgtab-bash.sh` and place the following line somewhere in your
+`~/.bashrc` file:
 
+    :::bash
     source ~/path/to/hgtab/hgtab-bash.sh
 
 ### OPTION 3: Hardest, Elegant
 
 Clone this repository somewhere with this command:
 
+    :::text
     hg clone http://bitbucket.org/sjl/hgtab/
 
-Add the following line to your ~/.bashrc file:
+Add the following line to your `~/.bashrc` file:
 
+    :::bash
     source ~/path/to/hgtab/hgtab-bash.sh
 
 If you use this method you can update the file by pulling down the changes
 from this repository:
 
+    :::text
     cd ~/path/to/hgtab
     hg pull
 
@@ -61,7 +65,7 @@
 Once hgtab is sourced it'll add some nifty tab completion features in your
 shell. For example, you can tab complete Mercurial commands:
 
-    #!console
+    :::console
     sjl at grendel in test $  hg re<tab(s)>
     recover  remove   rename   resolve  revert
     sjl at grendel in test $  hg re
@@ -69,7 +73,7 @@
 When you're using a command that wants a revision as a parameter, hitting tab
 will complete on tags (and bookmarks) and branches.
 
-    #!console
+    :::console
     sjl at grendel in test $  hg branches
     blue                          20:f05ca6eb51a1
     red                           16:8262f0345f41 (inactive)
@@ -94,7 +98,7 @@
 
 It will also complete remote paths when you're pushing or pulling.
 
-    #!console
+    :::console
     sjl at grendel in test $  hg paths
     alice-dev = http://alice-dev
     alice-stable = http://alice-stable
--- a/content/projects/t.html	Fri Jan 15 19:52:47 2010 -0500
+++ b/content/projects/t.html	Fri Jan 15 20:04:42 2010 -0500
@@ -96,11 +96,13 @@
 Next, decide where you want to keep your todo lists. I put mine in `~/tasks`.
 Create that directory:
 
+    :::text
     mkdir ~/tasks
 
 Finally, set up an alias to run `t`. Put something like this in your
 `~/.bashrc` file:
 
+    :::bash
     alias t='python ~/path/to/t.py --task-dir ~/tasks --list tasks'
 
 Make sure you run `source ~/.bashrc` or restart your terminal window to make
@@ -115,6 +117,7 @@
 
 To add a task, use `t [task description]`:
 
+    :::console
     $ t Clean the apartment.
     $ t Write chapter 10 of the novel.
     $ t Buy more beer.
@@ -124,6 +127,7 @@
 
 Listing your tasks is even easier -- just use `t`:
 
+    :::console
     $ t
     9  - Buy more beer.
     30 - Clean the apartment.
@@ -136,6 +140,7 @@
 
 After you're done with something, use `t -f ID` to finish it:
 
+    :::console
     $ t -f 31
     $ t
     9  - Buy more beer.
@@ -147,6 +152,7 @@
 Sometimes you might want to change the wording of a task. You can use `t -e ID
 [new description]` to do that:
 
+    :::console
     $ t -e 30 Clean the entire apartment.
     $ t
     9  - Buy more beer.
@@ -155,6 +161,7 @@
 
 Yes, nerds, you can use sed-style substitution strings:
 
+    :::console
     $ t -e 9 /more/a lot more/
     $ t
     9  - Buy a lot more beer.
@@ -170,6 +177,7 @@
 
 Counting your tasks is simple using the `wc` program:
 
+    :::console
     $ t | wc -l
           2
     $
@@ -178,10 +186,12 @@
 
 Want a count of your tasks right in your prompt?  Edit your `~/.bashrc` file:
 
+    :::bash
     export PS1="[$(t | wc -l | sed -e's/ *//')] $PS1"
 
 Now you've got a prompt that looks something like this:
 
+    :::console
     [2] $ t -f 30
     [1] $ t Feed the cat.
     [2] $
@@ -192,6 +202,7 @@
 sometimes it's useful to be able to have at least *one* level of organization.
 To split up your tasks into different lists you can add a few more aliases:
 
+    :::bash
     alias g='python ~/path/to/t.py --task-dir ~/tasks --list groceries'
     alias m='python ~/path/to/t.py --task-dir ~/tasks --list music-to-buy'
     alias w='python ~/path/to/t.py --task-dir ~/tasks --list wines-to-try'
@@ -203,6 +214,7 @@
 
 Add another alias to your `~/.bashrc` file:
 
+    :::bash
     alias b='python ~/path/to/t.py --task-dir . --list bugs'
 
 Now when you're in your project directory you can use `b` to manage the list