Filter | Description | Example |
---|---|---|
allintext | Searches for occurrences of all the keywords given. | allintext:"keyword" |
intext | Searches for the occurrences of keywords all at once or one at a time. | intext:"keyword" |
inurl | Searches for a URL matching one of the keywords. | inurl:"keyword" |
allinurl | Searches for a URL matching all the keywords in the query. | allinurl:"keyword" |
intitle | Searches for occurrences of keywords in title all or one. | intitle:"keyword" |
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RAR registration data | |
WinRAR | |
Unlimited Company License | |
UID=4b914fb772c8376bf571 | |
6412212250f5711ad072cf351cfa39e2851192daf8a362681bbb1d | |
cd48da1d14d995f0bbf960fce6cb5ffde62890079861be57638717 | |
7131ced835ed65cc743d9777f2ea71a8e32c7e593cf66794343565 | |
b41bcf56929486b8bcdac33d50ecf773996052598f1f556defffbd | |
982fbe71e93df6b6346c37a3890f3c7edc65d7f5455470d13d1190 | |
6e6fb824bcf25f155547b5fc41901ad58c0992f570be1cf5608ba9 |
$ErrorActionPreference = "Stop" | |
$notificationTitle = "Build Succeeded" | |
[Windows.UI.Notifications.ToastNotificationManager, Windows.UI.Notifications, ContentType = WindowsRuntime] > $null | |
$template = [Windows.UI.Notifications.ToastNotificationManager]::GetTemplateContent([Windows.UI.Notifications.ToastTemplateType]::ToastText01) | |
$toastXml = [xml] $template.GetXml() | |
$toastXml.GetElementsByTagName("text").AppendChild($toastXml.CreateTextNode($notificationTitle)) > $null | |
$xml = New-Object Windows.Data.Xml.Dom.XmlDocument | |
$xml.LoadXml($toastXml.OuterXml) | |
$toast = [Windows.UI.Notifications.ToastNotification]::new($xml) | |
$toast.Tag = "Test1" |
An guide how to activate Windows 11 Pro for free
Because you will get some more features like an Bitlocker and host your device as an External Desktop which can be accessed through the internet
The answer is yes! You can switch from almost any edition to Pro completely for free!
People which already have Pro, but not activated, can skip to this step.
What you first need to do is open CMD (Command Prompt) as Administrator using this keyboard key:
// | |
// ContentView.swift | |
// TemperatureControl | |
// | |
// Created by Anik on 10/9/20. | |
// | |
import SwiftUI | |
struct ContentView: View { |
All packages, except for Tini have been added to termux-root. To install them, simply pkg install root-repo && pkg install docker
. This will install the whole docker suite, left only Tini to be compiled manually.
If you use git on the command-line, you'll eventually find yourself wanting aliases for your most commonly-used commands. It's incredibly useful to be able to explore your repos with only a few keystrokes that eventually get hardcoded into muscle memory.
Some people don't add aliases because they don't want to have to adjust to not having them on a remote server. Personally, I find that having aliases doesn't mean I that forget the underlying commands, and aliases provide such a massive improvement to my workflow that it would be crazy not to have them.
The simplest way to add an alias for a specific git command is to use a standard bash alias.
# .bashrc