Bubble charts encode data in the area of circles. Although less perceptually-accurate than bar charts, they can pack hundreds of values into a small space. Implementation based on work by Jeff Heer. Data shows the Flare class hierarchy, also courtesy Jeff Heer.
[mysqld] | |
default-character-set=utf8 | |
default-collation=utf8_general_ci | |
character-set-server=utf8 | |
collation-server=utf8_general_ci | |
init-connect='SET NAMES utf8' | |
[client] | |
default-character-set=utf8 |
#!/usr/bin/env python | |
# | |
# Copyright 2001-2002 by Vinay Sajip. All Rights Reserved. | |
# | |
# Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software and its | |
# documentation for any purpose and without fee is hereby granted, | |
# provided that the above copyright notice appear in all copies and that | |
# both that copyright notice and this permission notice appear in | |
# supporting documentation, and that the name of Vinay Sajip | |
# not be used in advertising or publicity pertaining to distribution |
The tree
layout implements the Reingold-Tilford algorithm for efficient, tidy arrangement of layered nodes. The depth of nodes is computed by distance from the root, leading to a ragged appearance. Cartesian orientations are also supported. Implementation based on work by Jeff Heer and Jason Davies using Buchheim et al.'s linear-time variant of the Reingold-Tilford algorithm. Data shows the Flare class hierarchy, also courtesy Jeff Heer.
Compare to this Cartesian layout.
This fork uses DS locations connections as data + link to a live jsfiddle example
""" | |
Add copy to clipboard from IPython! | |
To install, just copy it to your profile/startup directory, typically: | |
~/.ipython/profile_default/startup/ | |
Example usage: | |
%clip hello world | |
# will store "hello world" |
// shamelessly snagged to use with backtick | |
javascript:void(location.href='https://www.pushbullet.com/push/link?url='+encodeURIComponent(location.href)+'&title='+encodeURIComponent(document.title)); |
(This gist is pretty old; I've written up my current approach to the Pyramid integration on this blog post, but that blog post doesn't go into the transactional management, so you may still find this useful.)
I've created a Pyramid scaffold which integrates Alembic, a migration tool, with the standard SQLAlchemy scaffold. (It also configures the Mako template system, because I prefer Mako.)
I am also using PostgreSQL for my database. PostgreSQL supports nested transactions. This means I can setup the tables at the beginning of the test session, then start a transaction before each test happens and roll it back after the test; in turn, this means my tests operate in the same environment I expect to use in production, but they are also fast.
I based my approach on [sontek's blog post](http://sontek.net/blog/