Standard escape codes are prefixed with Escape
:
- Ctrl-Key:
^[
- Octal:
\033
- Unicode:
\u001b
- Hexadecimal:
\x1B
- Decimal:
27
openapi: 3.0.3 | |
info: | |
version: '3.0' | |
title: 'V3' | |
description: | | |
Request Timing | |
When methods on the SDK are called, it should generally enqueue data locally into offline storage, and make batched flushes to the above endpoints on a timed basis, or when explicitly requested by the user. In general, the default flush interval should be in the 10s of seconds (reasonable default may depend on the nature of the platform), and should be configurable. | |
In the case of request failure (any non-20x response), the SDK should re-enqueue any failed events or attributes into local offline storage, and should begin an exponential slowdown of the flush interval, until a successful response is received. The backoff function should follow the decorrelated jitter algorithm below: |
/* | |
* | |
* Original code by Miononno | |
* https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1kanq1w2DA0 | |
* | |
* Enhanced by unknown @ lteforum.at | |
* | |
*/ | |
console.log("Loading ZTE Script v" + "2024-03-29-#1"); |
Made this example to show how to use Next.js router for a 100% SPA (no JS server) app.
You use Next.js router like normally, but don't define getStaticProps
and such. Instead you do client-only fetching with swr
, react-query
, or similar methods.
You can generate HTML fallback for the page if there's something meaningful to show before you "know" the params. (Remember, HTML is static, so it can't respond to dynamic query. But it can be different per route.)
Don't like Next? Here's how to do the same in Gatsby.
Explanation
This command sends a request to the Chat Completion API to generate high-level documentation for the file @src/arch.js
. The API is configured to use the llama3-gradient
model and to respond in Markdown format.
The messages
array contains two elements:
// Fuck the addition operator. Real programmers work in binary! | |
function add(a, b) { | |
// XOR to get the sum of the bits | |
var sum = a ^ b; | |
// "Carry" bits are common to both numbers | |
var carry = (a & b) << 1; | |
if (sum & carry) { | |
// Rinse and repeat until there are no leftover bits |
#!/bin/sh | |
# Examples: | |
# ./image64.sh myImage.png | |
# outputs: data:image/png;base64,xxxxx | |
# ./image64.sh myImage.png -img | |
# outputs: <img src="data:image/png;base64,xxxxx"> | |
filename=$(basename $1) | |
xtype=${filename##*.} | |
append="" |
Lecture 1: Introduction to Research — [📝Lecture Notebooks] [
Lecture 2: Introduction to Python — [📝Lecture Notebooks] [
Lecture 3: Introduction to NumPy — [📝Lecture Notebooks] [
Lecture 4: Introduction to pandas — [📝Lecture Notebooks] [
Lecture 5: Plotting Data — [📝Lecture Notebooks] [[
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The package that linked you here is now pure ESM. It cannot be require()
'd from CommonJS.
This means you have the following choices:
import foo from 'foo'
instead of const foo = require('foo')
to import the package. You also need to put "type": "module"
in your package.json and more. Follow the below guide.await import(…)
from CommonJS instead of require(…)
.