* I'm Vinnícius Cedraz Ribeiro and this repo has only this readme
* Where you'll find some information about me
Relevant Information
* I'm now a software engineering student at 42-São Paulo
* C, C++, Javascript, Shell, Lua and Neovim are my current interests
Random Information
* Other than learning web-development I've been teaching English here and there
* I enjoy songwriting, singing, playing the electric and acoustic guitars,
* skateboarding and several different physical activities
* Oh, and watching movies and series too of course
* Currently my favourite one is Peaky Blinders
Contact Information
* Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/vinn%C3%ADcius-ribeiro-368180a8/.
* Most used e-mail: [email protected]
* Oldest and least used e-mail: [email protected] (please don't contact me here)
Totally Irrelavant Stuff
* Fun fact: I only started learning Bash very recently
* So at the time I created the vinni.sh e-mail I had no idea what .sh meant in Bash
* Therefore, .sh was not a reference to that .sh thingy
* It was just a (fun maybe?) coincidence
* Now, what the .sh actually stood for is a story I reserve only for more informal conversations.
The exercises I've done practicing to the exam2. Try them yourself and compare your solutions to mine! After that you can test your skills with this exam simulator here: bash -c "$(curl https://grademe.fr)"
This project is about creating our own IRC server. We use an actual IRC client to connect to our server and test it. As the internet is ruled by solid standards protocols that allow connected computers to interact with each other, it’s always a good thing to know!
this repo is a personal C library, consisting of some reimplementations of common C standard library functions and also implementations of several useful C functions that cannot be found there.
Get Next Line is the second C project in the École 42 curriculum. It can read files and get a single line on each call of the get_next_line() function. The program reads from multiple files without losing track of what was already read, so at each call it starts from the next line. Hence, "get next line" ;)
this project is a game totally created with the MIT tool SCRATCH latter it was translated into javascript and deployed on github pages using the leopard.js.com tool