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Medium Syndication Data
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13 changed files with 85 additions and 61 deletions
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---
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title: "Archiving Toots"
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date: 2022-05-20T22:47:48-04:00
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date: 2022-05-20 22:47:48-04:00
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draft: false
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tags: ["Hugo", "Mastodon", "Archive"]
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math: false
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medium_enabled: true
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medium_post_id: c1b813e3dff0
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tags:
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- Hugo
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- Mastodon
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- Archive
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title: Archiving Toots
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---
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In the spirit of [syndicating Mastodon toots](/blog/why-i-pesos-from-mastodon/)
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to my own site, I wrote a Python script that turns toots into Hugo markdown
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files.
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@ -1,10 +1,13 @@
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---
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title: "Automatically Updating Podman Containers"
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date: 2022-05-15T22:20:47-04:00
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date: 2022-05-15 22:20:47-04:00
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draft: false
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tags: ["Linux", "Containers"]
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math: false
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medium_enabled: true
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medium_post_id: 9fe3d313dea8
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tags:
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- Linux
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- Containers
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title: Automatically Updating Podman Containers
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---
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Recently, I have been [transitioning to Podman](/blog/rootless-docker-compose-podman) for running my container infrastructure. In the process, I brought over Watchtower which I have previously used for auto-updating docker containers. Before doing so, I didn't check its [compatibility](https://github.com/containrrr/watchtower/issues/1060) (whoops) and found a few of my containers would every other week or so not come back up.
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@ -29,4 +32,3 @@ TimeoutStartSec=0
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[Install]
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WantedBy=multi-user.target
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```
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@ -1,10 +1,12 @@
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---
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title: "Most Common Mistake in Induction Proofs"
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date: 2022-05-15T22:49:34-04:00
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date: 2022-05-15 22:49:34-04:00
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draft: false
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tags: ["Math"]
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math: true
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medium_enabled: true
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medium_post_id: 9a14aa49d67a
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tags:
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- Math
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title: Most Common Mistake in Induction Proofs
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---
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One of the most common mistakes I see in induction proofs is assuming the recursive case and working backwards towards the induction hypothesis. This may be fine for formulas that are symmetric like those involving equality, but this way of proving induction fails if not. This post will show such example.
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- State what formulas you know about the various variables
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- Substitute into the **induction hypothesis**
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- Simplify until you reach the $n+1$th step.
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---
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title: "Conditional Assignment in Bash"
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date: 2022-06-19T18:49:47-04:00
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date: 2022-06-19 18:49:47-04:00
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draft: false
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tags: ["Bash"]
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math: false
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medium_enabled: true
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medium_post_id: 8217bfd3af16
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tags:
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- Bash
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title: Conditional Assignment in Bash
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---
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Many programming languages include an quick way to perform a
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---
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title: "Displaying a Toot in Hugo"
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date: 2022-05-20T16:57:11-04:00
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date: 2022-05-20 16:57:11-04:00
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draft: false
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tags: ["Hugo", "Mastodon"]
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math: false
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medium_enabled: true
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medium_post_id: a10174e115a2
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tags:
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- Hugo
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- Mastodon
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title: Displaying a Toot in Hugo
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---
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Mastodon for me is a nice friendly place and I enjoy participating in that community. With that, I want to be able to share the great toots out there in my own website as well as keep an archive of all the toots I made. This post will go over the code I wrote in Hugo to display a single toot into a blog post.
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---
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title: "Displaying Hikes with gpx.studio"
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date: 2022-05-23T16:35:01-04:00
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date: 2022-05-23 16:35:01-04:00
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draft: false
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tags: ["Hugo", "GPS"]
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math: false
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medium_enabled: true
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medium_post_id: ac442c9cf7fc
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tags:
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- Hugo
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- GPS
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title: Displaying Hikes with gpx.studio
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---
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As the weather gets warmer, I am starting to go on more hikes. Several people on their websites share a Strava embed which highlights a path taken during their workout. I believe as a community this has great potential for sharing our favorite hiking paths. I don't, however, want to rely on Strava to host my GPS data. Instead, we will showcase how to accomplish the same effect but with open technologies.
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---
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title: "Document Formats and Plaintext"
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date: 2022-05-19T21:24:52-04:00
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date: 2022-05-19 21:24:52-04:00
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draft: false
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tags: ["Documentation"]
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math: false
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medium_enabled: true
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medium_post_id: b339b9d9793b
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tags:
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- Documentation
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title: Document Formats and Plaintext
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---
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Microsoft Word, Apple Pages, Google Docs, Libreoffice Writer all provide a method of writing and formatting text. This is then normally stored in a "binary" file. I put binary in quotes as they are often stored in a zip archive of XML files. However, because it's in a zip archive, I cannot use standard plaintext tools to search within the document.
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---
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title: "Git Pushing to Multiple Remotes"
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date: 2022-06-02T21:19:29-04:00
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date: 2022-06-02 21:19:29-04:00
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draft: false
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tags: ["Git"]
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math: false
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medium_enabled: true
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medium_post_id: 41533d2710fd
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tags:
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- Git
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title: Git Pushing to Multiple Remotes
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---
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Git's greatest strength is its first-class support for decentralization.
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---
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title: "Retreiving GPS data in decimal format from EXIF data in photos"
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date: 2022-06-19T19:01:35-04:00
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date: 2022-06-19 19:01:35-04:00
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draft: false
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tags: ["GPS"]
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math: false
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medium_enabled: true
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medium_post_id: 45193055c22d
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tags:
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- GPS
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title: Retreiving GPS data in decimal format from EXIF data in photos
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---
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For a new feature that I'm cooking up for my website, I need to grab the GPS information from the EXIF data stored in my images. Luckily, `imagemagick`
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---
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title: "Hiding Section From Listing in Hugo"
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date: 2022-05-19T22:43:04-04:00
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date: 2022-05-19 22:43:04-04:00
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draft: false
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tags: ["Hugo"]
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math: false
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medium_enabled: true
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medium_post_id: d71625f9235b
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tags:
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- Hugo
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title: Hiding Section From Listing in Hugo
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---
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In Hugo you can list all the sections using the following code
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{{ end }}
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{{ end }}
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```
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---
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title: "Python Argument Parser"
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date: 2022-05-16T17:07:06-04:00
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draft: false
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tags: ["Python"]
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aliases:
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- /blog/python-argpase/
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- /blog/python-argpase/
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date: 2022-05-16 17:07:06-04:00
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draft: false
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math: false
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medium_enabled: true
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medium_post_id: 7d4c148bd2d0
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tags:
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- Python
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title: Python Argument Parser
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---
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*For a much better description of argument parsing in Python, please visit https://docs.python.org/3/library/argparse.html.*
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flag1 = args['flag1']
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flag2 = args['flag2']
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```
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---
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title: "Having your Website Visible on the Fediverse"
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date: 2022-06-12T18:35:30-04:00
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date: 2022-06-12 18:35:30-04:00
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draft: false
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tags: ["Mastodon"]
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math: false
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medium_enabled: true
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medium_post_id: 3c4fe896f3fb
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tags:
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- Mastodon
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title: Having your Website Visible on the Fediverse
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---
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[ActivityPub](https://www.w3.org/TR/activitypub/) is the backbone
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---
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title: "On Writing Simple Scripts"
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date: 2022-05-19T20:40:19-04:00
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date: 2022-05-19 20:40:19-04:00
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draft: false
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tags: []
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math: false
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medium_enabled: true
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medium_post_id: 63c82315e4f5
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tags: []
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title: On Writing Simple Scripts
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---
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I generally prefer a simpler solution to a problem if possible. This comes especially true with scripting. If I write a small script for something like say my website I generally have three requirements of the system:
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- Currently has developer mindshare so others are apt to understand the scripts
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Both those reasons are likely to make it so that my choice will change over time. Perl used to be the very popular choice for scripting...
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