politics 1.0.82 → 1.0.88

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Files changed (57) hide show
  1. checksums.yaml +4 -4
  2. data/CYCLE_OF_HEALTH +9 -15
  3. data/Makefile +1 -1
  4. data/README.md +54 -46
  5. data/VERSION_NUMBER +1 -1
  6. data/bin/append_each +0 -0
  7. data/bin/google_speak +4 -3
  8. data/bin/lines +0 -0
  9. data/bin/nth_word +0 -0
  10. data/bin/prepend_each +0 -0
  11. data/bin/rgsub +0 -0
  12. data/documentation/append_each +3 -0
  13. data/documentation/left_right.exe +1 -1
  14. data/documentation/page +41 -41
  15. data/documentation/prepend_each +3 -0
  16. data/gem_data/VERSION_NUMBER +1 -1
  17. data/index.html +57 -51
  18. data/install.sh +5 -1
  19. data/non_compiled_programs/google_speak +4 -3
  20. data/src/_compilation/abs +38 -19
  21. data/src/_compilation/add +38 -19
  22. data/src/_compilation/append +38 -19
  23. data/src/_compilation/append_each +290 -0
  24. data/src/_compilation/args +38 -19
  25. data/src/_compilation/delete +38 -19
  26. data/src/_compilation/div +38 -19
  27. data/src/_compilation/exp +38 -19
  28. data/src/_compilation/floor +38 -19
  29. data/src/_compilation/gsub +38 -19
  30. data/src/_compilation/gsubip +38 -19
  31. data/src/_compilation/last_nth +38 -19
  32. data/src/_compilation/lines +38 -19
  33. data/src/_compilation/mul +38 -19
  34. data/src/_compilation/nth +38 -19
  35. data/src/_compilation/nth_word +38 -19
  36. data/src/_compilation/prepend +38 -19
  37. data/src/_compilation/prepend_each +290 -0
  38. data/src/_compilation/rip +38 -19
  39. data/src/_compilation/rnip +38 -19
  40. data/src/_compilation/selectlines +38 -19
  41. data/src/_compilation/sub +38 -19
  42. data/src/_compilation/swap +38 -19
  43. data/src/_compilation/trim +38 -19
  44. data/src/programs/append_each +0 -0
  45. data/src/programs/lines +0 -0
  46. data/src/programs/prepend_each +0 -0
  47. data/src/rgsub +0 -0
  48. data/src/rgsub.c +24 -25
  49. data/src/src/Makefile +1 -1
  50. data/src/src/cd +3 -0
  51. data/src/src/code +30 -9
  52. data/src/src/functions.cr +29 -16
  53. data/src/src/mk +6 -8
  54. data/src/src/rm +1 -0
  55. metadata +12 -3
  56. data/src/src/q.cr +0 -9
  57. /data/images/{12.png → 8.png} +0 -0
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data/CYCLE_OF_HEALTH CHANGED
@@ -1,10 +1,10 @@
1
- The following shall be regarded as a methodological "Cycle of Health", a cycle of behavior that humans happen to fall into, or can knowingly cause, that is very likely to, result in optimal health.
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+ The following shall be regarded as a methodological Cycle of Health,” a cycle of behavior that humans happen to fall into, or can knowingly cause, that is very likely to, result in optimal health.
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  Statistics should be found or determined that prove this, this is simple and loop
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  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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- 1.1. De facto joining of Potentially-Increasing-Survival-Potential-Group (on whichever aspects(s) of life, you can identify or another, whether or not a specific "group" would qualify as such)
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+ 1.1. De facto joining of Potentially-Increasing-Survival-Potential-Group (on whichever aspects(s) of life, you can identify or another, whether or not a specific group would qualify as such)
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  1.2. Positive interaction with 1 or more others in PISPG
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  for each of Cycle 1, after the point is completed:
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  2.1. Recognition of having likely improved survival potential (on whichever aspects(s) of life)
@@ -13,7 +13,7 @@ Statistics should be found or determined that prove this, this is simple and loo
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  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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  So the full cycle would be:
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- 1) De facto joining of Potentially-Increasing-Survival-Potential-Group (on whichever aspects(s) of life, you can identify or another, whether or not a specific "group" would qualify as such)
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+ 1) De facto joining of Potentially-Increasing-Survival-Potential-Group (on whichever aspects(s) of life, you can identify or another, whether or not a specific group would qualify as such)
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  2) Recognition of having likely improved survival potential (on whichever aspects(s) of life)
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  3) [(Mental/spiritual/physical/emotional/general/uncategorized) health]/[pleasure]/[happiness], just here, and nowhere else
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  4) Positive interaction with 1 or more others in Potentially-Increasing-Survival-Potential-Group
@@ -25,8 +25,6 @@ Statistics should be found or determined that prove this, this is simple and loo
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  A short form would be
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-
29
-
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  As a loop
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  Join, recognize good, happiness
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@@ -34,24 +32,20 @@ As a loop
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  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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- (A "group" could be any kind of group, it could only be 2 people, it could be 1 million people.)
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-
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- "De facto joining" would be very liberal in classification
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+ (A group could be any kind of group, it could only be 2 people, it could be 1 million people.)
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+ “De facto joining” would be very liberal in classification
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38
 
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  Obviously, people and robots should operate on the basis of this.
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-
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- It is currently very not-known, the relative importances of these points. So there is no statement to "do one point more than another".
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+ It is currently very not-known, the relative importances of these points. So there is no statement to “do one point more than another.”
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42
 
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43
  Everyone should try to maximize, to the best of their ability, all 7 points.
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44
 
49
-
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  Point 2.2 is completely incompatible with psychiatry. The upsides of such an approach could, and should, be tested. Surely, there would
51
- be a tremendous amount of bias and vested interest in this methodology not seeming to "work in practice", but would this work in practice?
52
-
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- The answer is <b><span color="blue" size="large">YES, DEFINITELY.</span></b>
46
+ be a tremendous amount of bias and vested interest in this methodology not seeming to work in practice,” but would this work in practice?
54
47
 
48
+ The answer is <b><span color="blue" size="large">YES, DEFINITELY.</span></b>
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49
 
56
50
  See also
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- Ask this software about "ai"
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+ Ask this software about ai
data/Makefile CHANGED
@@ -24,6 +24,6 @@ clean:
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  rm bin/*
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  exit 0
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  push:
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- (rm index.html; make all && ./page clear && push)
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+ (rm index.html; make all && ./install.sh y && ./page clear && push)
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  install:
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  ./install.sh
data/README.md CHANGED
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
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  <h1 style='color: green'>Practical Self-Empowerment Utilities Covering Every Facet of Life </h1>
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-
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+ [![Video](https://img.youtube.com/vi/Fx9x8cArK30/maxresdefault.jpg)](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fx9x8cArK30)
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@@ -31,7 +31,7 @@ I intend to make people more able.
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31
  I was working on a “to buy” program regarding stocks, but it only
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  partly works right now and it's not as useful as the other software.
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  The find housing tool actually helped me to find housing in real life.
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- Those aside, there are these 84 programs.
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+ Those aside, there are these 86 programs.
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  Some ones that convert text are skipped in this documentation because
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36
  their name and usage is obvious (e.g., color tools).
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37
 
@@ -97,7 +97,7 @@ You can use them anywhere without dependencies.
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98
  Democracy Github Ruby Gem Python PIP Package
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99
 
100
- Without further ado, here are the 84 documented programs. (The obvious usage
100
+ Without further ado, here are the 86 documented programs. (The obvious usage
101
101
  ones are omitted.)
102
102
 
103
103
  ### 1. Ultimate Chat Application.exe
@@ -183,7 +183,10 @@ ones are omitted.)
183
183
  maximum prices, and Kijiji opens with your options.
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184
  This tool kind of actually helped me to find housing in real life.
185
185
  The default city is “Ottawa.” You can easily change this.
186
- ### 6. Google Speak
186
+ ### 6. Prepend Each
187
+
188
+ Prepends a string to each line
189
+ ### 7. Google Speak
187
190
 
188
191
  Google speak is really useful. It speaks a statement using the Google
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192
  Translate voice, which is probably the most authoritative and
@@ -191,7 +194,10 @@ ones are omitted.)
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194
  It's kind of like “espeak” or similar tools, but it is much better.
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195
  You need an internet connection for it to work.
193
196
  It is probably limited at 100 characters.
194
- ### 7. Selectlines
197
+ ### 8. Append Each
198
+
199
+ Appends a string to each line
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+ ### 9. Selectlines
195
201
 
196
202
  selectlines shows all nonblank lines from the input
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  Example
@@ -199,7 +205,7 @@ ones are omitted.)
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  (echo 2; echo; echo; echo) | selectlines
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  => 2
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  The result would be 2, with no blank lines after that
202
- ### 8. Processes
208
+ ### 10. Processes
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209
 
204
210
  Processes lists all processes with a certain name
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  For example
@@ -207,7 +213,7 @@ ones are omitted.)
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  processes bash
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214
  processes ruby
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215
  processes gsub
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- ### 9. Emeraldc
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+ ### 11. Emeraldc
211
217
 
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  The Ultimate C Preprocessor
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  I'm naming this preprocessor “Emerald C.”
@@ -339,32 +345,32 @@ ones are omitted.)
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  sys 0m0.160s
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  Rust takes 0.637 seconds to compile an empty file!
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347
  That is not ideal.
342
- ### 10. Nth Word
348
+ ### 12. Nth Word
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349
 
344
350
  nth_word gets the nth word of each line
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  For example
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352
  nth_word 3
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353
  gets the 3rd word of each line
348
- ### 11. Last Nth
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+ ### 13. Last Nth
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355
 
350
356
  Last nth gets the last n lines from input
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  For example
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  last_nth 3
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  Would get the 3rd from the last line
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- ### 12. Speakcat
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+ ### 14. Speakcat
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361
 
356
362
  Speak cat is a tool like “cat,” which shows the content of files
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  (technically, it combines the content of files).
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  But speak cat also speaks the text.
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  Which could be useful in some circumstances.
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  It's kind of like “tee” to your ear.
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- ### 13. UCA CLI
367
+ ### 15. UCA CLI
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  CLI for uca app
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- ### 14. Big Num
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+ ### 16. Big Num
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  ![UCA](./images/10.png)
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- ### 15. Squeeze
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+ ### 17. Squeeze
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  Squeeze reads all input from stdin, then it prints it back omitting
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  argument 1 line from the front, and argument 2 lines from the back
@@ -374,20 +380,20 @@ ones are omitted.)
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  squeeze 5 3
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  This would omit the first 5 lines and the last 3 lines
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  squeeze 2 2 [file] also works, it outputs text to file
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- ### 16. Dictate
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+ ### 18. Dictate
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  Dictate opens web pages in emerald browser, or in any browser
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  (depending on the environment variable set), by you speaking, instead
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  of typing.
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  There is a mode called c_mode, that allows you to make code from
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  speaking.
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- ### 17. Prepend
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+ ### 19. Prepend
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386
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  prepend prepends input taken from the standard input to a file
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  Usage
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394
  prepend [file]
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  This is text to be prepended
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- ### 18. Chat Rb
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+ ### 20. Chat Rb
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392
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  This program is excellent.
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  It's essentially a mix of ChatGPT and a shell, such as bash or ZSH.
@@ -396,16 +402,16 @@ ones are omitted.)
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  It outputs chatgpt data to an output folder in home folder and copies
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  it to clipboard
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  To run a shell command, prefix things with “c,” such as c gcc.....
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- ### 19. Append
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+ ### 21. Append
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401
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  Appends text to file
402
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  Example
403
409
  append file
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  This is more text to be appended
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- ### 20. Delete
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+ ### 22. Delete
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407
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  Recursively delete all files named a certain name.
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- ### 21. Gsubip
414
+ ### 23. Gsubip
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415
 
410
416
  Global Substitute (Gsub) In Place
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  gsubip is like gsub, which replaces all instances of a regular
@@ -422,7 +428,7 @@ ones are omitted.)
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  It takes exactly 3 arguments, no more, no fewer.
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  See also
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  gsub
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- ### 22. Rhyme
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+ ### 24. Rhyme
426
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427
433
  A very powerful music generator program that doesn't use AI.
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  See this channel as an example of potential usage of this public
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  Disingenuous to the extreme, the society they subvert
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  The society is the ones who hurt
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  ---
606
- ### 23. Email
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+ ### 25. Email
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613
 
608
614
  This currently doesn't work for gmail since 2022 due to policy changes.
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  A simple and practical tool to email people using Himalaya
@@ -618,10 +624,10 @@ ones are omitted.)
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  Example
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  email 'Gregory, I love your software!' gregorycohenvideos@gmail.com
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  my_friend@outlook.com person@example.com
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- ### 24. Floor
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+ ### 26. Floor
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628
 
623
629
  Gets the floor of numbers e.g. 21.3 -> 21
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- ### 25. Rgsub
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+ ### 27. Rgsub
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631
 
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  Recursively replaces text.
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  Verbosely tells you everything that happens.
@@ -639,11 +645,11 @@ ones are omitted.)
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  -v, verbose mode
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  -- Indicate end of options.
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642
- ### 26. Lines
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+ ### 28. Lines
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  Lines gets the number of files in the current folder that you are in.
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  It can also act like “wc -l” if you pipe data into it.
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- ### 27. Clock
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+ ### 29. Clock
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648
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  clock is useful
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  clock is a command line alarm clock
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  To stop it
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  Run this command
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  clock stop
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- ### 28. Emoji
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+ ### 30. Emoji
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  Emoji converts words to emojis from the standard input
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  It can also speak the output
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  It can also copy the output to your clipboard
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  It is very useful
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  ![UCA](./images/6.png)
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- ### 29. Close
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+ ### 31. Close
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  “Close” is a simple program that closes “Emerald Browser,” a new web
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  browser based on the same engine as Chrome. Currently, Emerald Browser
@@ -701,12 +707,12 @@ ones are omitted.)
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  some people.
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  Currently, content, like YouTube videos, can't be made fullscreen.
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  If anyone wants to contribute, feel free to!
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- ### 30. Copy
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+ ### 32. Copy
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711
 
706
712
  copy copies the standard input
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713
  Example
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  ls | copy
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- ### 31. Gsub
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+ ### 33. Gsub
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716
 
711
717
  Gsub is very powerful.
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  Usage
@@ -715,7 +721,7 @@ ones are omitted.)
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721
  cat text | gsub man dog
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  cat text | gsub 'man|boy|cat|dog' food
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723
  ls | gsub Desktop cat
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- ### 32. News
724
+ ### 34. News
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720
726
  Gets the news from bbc
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  Usage
@@ -723,14 +729,14 @@ ones are omitted.)
723
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  news speak
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  uses google_speak to SPEAK the news, one story at a time.
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731
  ![UCA](./images/5.png)
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- ### 33. Args
732
+ ### 35. Args
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733
 
728
734
  args is like a better xargs
729
735
  args works properly with spaces in the name of commands
730
736
  It takes exactly one argument
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  Example
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  ls | args “mv -t ../f”
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- ### 34. Rnip
739
+ ### 36. Rnip
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741
  Replace Not In Place
736
742
  This is like gsub, but for strings, not for regular expressions
@@ -738,10 +744,10 @@ ones are omitted.)
738
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  echo .......... | rnip foo bar
739
745
  See also
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746
  gsub
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- ### 35. Trim
747
+ ### 37. Trim
742
748
 
743
749
  Trims spaces of each line
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- ### 36. Quot
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+ ### 38. Quot
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751
 
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752
  Turns quotes in text into good text and makes text presentable.
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753
  Example
@@ -752,7 +758,7 @@ ones are omitted.)
752
758
  Example 3
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759
  (Quote the file and output it)
754
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  quot text_file
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- ### 37. Open
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+ ### 39. Open
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762
 
757
763
  “open” is a very efficient program that searches a query from google,
758
764
  and then opens it in Emerald Browser.
@@ -773,25 +779,25 @@ ones are omitted.)
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779
  See also
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780
  emerald-browser
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781
  close
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- ### 38. Swap
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+ ### 40. Swap
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783
 
778
784
  Swaps two files
779
785
  Example
780
786
  swap text1 text2
781
- ### 39. Exp
787
+ ### 41. Exp
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788
 
783
789
  exp is an exponentiation tool
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790
  (echo 5; echo 3) | exp
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791
  => 125
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792
  (echo 2; echo 10) | exp
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  => 1024
788
- ### 40. Div
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+ ### 42. Div
789
795
 
790
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  Divides numbers
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797
  Example
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798
  (echo 5000; echo 100) | div
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799
  => 50
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- ### 41. Mul
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+ ### 43. Mul
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801
 
796
802
  Multiply numbers
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803
  echo 1 > file
@@ -801,10 +807,10 @@ ones are omitted.)
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807
  echo 5 >> file
802
808
  cat file | mul
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809
  => 120
804
- ### 42. Nth
810
+ ### 44. Nth
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811
 
806
812
  Nth gets the nth line from the input
807
- ### 43. Abs
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+ ### 45. Abs
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814
 
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815
  Abs gets the absolute value of an integer
810
816
  The absolute value of a number is the value of that number without its
@@ -817,13 +823,13 @@ ones are omitted.)
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823
  => 12
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824
  The last one would do -2 - -10, the result would be -12, and then the
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825
  absolute value would be computed, and so the result would be 12.
820
- ### 44. Add
826
+ ### 46. Add
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827
 
822
828
  See the sub example
823
829
  add adds integers from the standard input
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830
  (echo 1; echo 2; echo 3) | add
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831
  The result would be 6
826
- ### 45. Sub
832
+ ### 47. Sub
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833
 
828
834
  Sub is a simple command line program that subtracts integers.
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835
  For some reason, no simple program did this.
@@ -840,14 +846,14 @@ ones are omitted.)
840
846
  (echo 5; echo 2) | sub
841
847
  Result =>
842
848
  3
843
- ### 46. Rip
849
+ ### 48. Rip
844
850
 
845
851
  Replace In Place
846
852
  rip tool replaces a string, not a regular expression, with another
847
853
  string
848
854
  Example
849
855
  rip cat dog file
850
- ### 47. G+
856
+ ### 49. G+
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857
 
852
858
  A compiler for C += 2. If you want to use C++ with Python syntax, you
853
859
  can use this.
@@ -855,7 +861,7 @@ ones are omitted.)
855
861
  Example
856
862
  g+ a.cpp -o out
857
863
  See also README file & emerald-browser and its source
858
- ### 48. T
864
+ ### 50. T
859
865
 
860
866
  “t” is incredibly useful.
861
867
  It can be used many, many times every day by computer power users.
@@ -898,7 +904,9 @@ Navigation
898
904
  Emerald Browser
899
905
  Left Right.exe
900
906
  Find Housing
907
+ Prepend Each
901
908
  Google Speak
909
+ Append Each
902
910
  Selectlines
903
911
  Processes
904
912
  Emeraldc
data/VERSION_NUMBER CHANGED
@@ -1 +1 @@
1
- 82.0
1
+ 88.0
data/bin/append_each ADDED
Binary file
data/bin/google_speak CHANGED
@@ -1,3 +1,4 @@
1
- #!/bin/bash
2
- say() { local IFS=+;/usr/bin/mplayer -ao alsa -really-quiet -noconsolecontrols "http://translate.google.com/translate_tts?ie=UTF-8&client=tw-ob&q=$*&tl=en"; }
3
- say $* &>/dev/null
1
+ #!/bin/sh
2
+ IFS=+
3
+
4
+ mplayer -ao alsa -really-quiet -noconsolecontrols "http://translate.google.com/translate_tts?ie=UTF-8&client=tw-ob&q=$*&tl=en" 2>/dev/null 1>/dev/null
data/bin/lines CHANGED
Binary file
data/bin/nth_word CHANGED
Binary file
data/bin/prepend_each ADDED
Binary file
data/bin/rgsub CHANGED
Binary file
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
1
+
2
+
3
+ Appends a string to each line
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
1
1
  This is a tool to bring sanity to politics.
2
2
 
3
- ![UCA](./images/12.png)
3
+ ![UCA](./images/8.png)
4
4
 
5
5
  It gets viewpoints from the person that see the good in each political side, left, right, left, right, etc.
6
6
 
data/documentation/page CHANGED
@@ -139,43 +139,43 @@ def main
139
139
  a = "<div class=inner>#{a}</div>"
140
140
 
141
141
  a = <<~EOF
142
- <!DOCTYPE html>
143
-
144
- <html>
145
- <head>
146
- <meta charset="UTF-8">
147
- <title>Democracy</title>
148
- <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1"/>
149
- <style type=text/css>
150
- b, a {
151
-
152
- text-shadow:0px 0px 0px black;
153
- color:#009900;
154
- }
155
-
156
- h1, h2 {
157
- color: #009900;
158
- }
159
-
160
- .header {
161
- box-shadow: none;
162
- padding-top: 30px;
163
- margin-top: 20px;
164
- margin-bottom: 20px;
165
-
166
- }
167
-
168
- body {
169
- z-index: 0;
170
- }
171
-
172
- .cd1 {
173
- display:block;
174
- z-index: 1;
175
- }
176
-
177
- .cd2 {
178
- background-color:#{BACKGROUND_COLOR};
142
+ <!DOCTYPE html>
143
+
144
+ <html>
145
+ <head>
146
+ <meta charset="UTF-8">
147
+ <title>Democracy</title>
148
+ <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1"/>
149
+ <style type=text/css>
150
+ b, a {
151
+
152
+ text-shadow:0px 0px 0px black;
153
+ color:#009900;
154
+ }
155
+
156
+ h1, h2 {
157
+ color: #009900;
158
+ }
159
+
160
+ .header {
161
+ box-shadow: none;
162
+ padding-top: 30px;
163
+ margin-top: 20px;
164
+ margin-bottom: 20px;
165
+
166
+ }
167
+
168
+ body {
169
+ z-index: 0;
170
+ }
171
+
172
+ .cd1 {
173
+ display:block;
174
+ z-index: 1;
175
+ }
176
+
177
+ .cd2 {
178
+ background-color:#{BACKGROUND_COLOR};
179
179
  color:#{BG};
180
180
  width:50%;
181
181
  display:inline-block;
@@ -431,9 +431,9 @@ if (not_first_time) {
431
431
  str.gsub! '"', '\\"'
432
432
  str2.gsub! '"', '\\"'
433
433
 
434
- cmd = 'cd ..; cp index.html /home/a/foon/*/index.html; lynx -dump -stdin<README.md | \
435
- squeeze 0 0 README.md;
436
- ruby -e "print File.read(\"README.md\").gsub(10.chr, \' \'+10.chr).gsub(' << str << "," << str2 << ')"|squeeze 0 0 README.md'
434
+ cmd = 'cd ..; cp index.html /home/a/foon/*/index.html; lynx -dump -stdin<README.md | squeeze 0 0 README.md
435
+
436
+ ruby -e "print File.read(\"README.md\").gsub(10.chr, \' \'+10.chr).gsub(' << str << "," << str2 << ')" | squeeze 0 0 README.md'
437
437
  system cmd
438
438
 
439
439
  a = File.open("../README.md")
@@ -448,7 +448,7 @@ ruby -e "print File.read(\"README.md\").gsub(10.chr, \' \'+10.chr).gsub(' << st
448
448
  File.open "../README.md", "w" do |file|
449
449
  file << ("<h1 style='color: green'>" << lines[0] << " " << lines[1] << "</h1>" << ("\n " * 2))
450
450
  v = "Fx9x8cArK30"
451
- # file << "[![Video](https://img.youtube.com/vi/#{v}/maxresdefault.jpg)](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=#{v}) "
451
+ file << "[![Video](https://img.youtube.com/vi/#{v}/maxresdefault.jpg)](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=#{v}) "
452
452
  file << ("\n " * 5)
453
453
  file << rest.sub(/all\s*still/m, "all still").sub(/IFRAME.+?\n/, "").gsub(/\[\d+\]/,
454
454
  "").each_line.reject do |line|
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
1
+
2
+
3
+ Prepends a string to each line
@@ -1 +1 @@
1
- 81.0
1
+ 87.0