See how a minor change to your commit message style can make you a better programmer.
Format: <type>(<scope>): <subject>
<scope>
is optional
switch (uniform.type) | |
{ | |
case 'b': | |
case 'bool': | |
case 'boolean': | |
// single int value | |
case 'i': | |
case '1i' |
$/
artifacts/
build/
docs/
lib/
packages/
samples/
src/
tests/
There are lots of command lines which can be used with the Google Chrome browser. Some change behavior of features, others are for debugging or experimenting. This page lists the available switches including their conditions and descriptions. Last automated update occurred on 2018-10-20.
Condition | Explanation |
---|---|
-- | Report pseudo allocation traces. Pseudo traces are derived from currently active trace events. |
--/prefetch:1 | /prefetch:# arguments to use when launching various process types. It has been observed that when file reads are consistent for 3 process launches with the same /prefetch:# argument, the Windows prefetcher starts issuing reads in batch at process launch. Because reads depend on the process type, the prefetcher wouldn't be able to observe consistent reads if no /prefetch:# arguments were used. Note that the browser process has no /prefetch:# argument; as such a |
This tutorial on Regular Expression (Regex) aims to assist you in comprehending and establishing the order of unique characters for validating a search term. A Regex refers to a sequence of characters that outlines a particular search pattern. Whether incorporated into code or search algorithm, regular expressions enable the identification of specific character patterns within a string, as well as the identification and substitution of individual characters or sequences of characters within a string. Moreover, they are commonly employed for validating input data.
This tutorial will show you how to harness the power of regular expressions to manipulate text based on specific patterns.
Let us explore how to utilize regex for matching emails using the expression /^([a-z0-9_.-]+)@([\da-z.-]+).([a-z.]{2,6})$
.
π Morning 16 commits ββββββββββββββββββββ 8.1% π Daytime 49 commits ββββββββββββββββββββ 24.7% π Night 133 commits ββββββββββββββββββββ 67.2%
FeathersJS uses a package called Grant for most of the OAuth functionality. Grant now supports the Apple OAuth flow, but only in recent versions. FeathersJS v5 (currently in prerelease) uses this new Apple-supporting version of Grant. For this reason, I would suggest first upgrading to FeathersJS v5 (Dove) https://dove.docs.feathersjs.com/guides/migrating.html
Sign in with Apple does NOT work with servers set up as localhost. If you haven't already, you'll need to pick a domain for your FeatherJS server. If your main domain is example.com
, you might want to pick a subdomain like devapi.example.com
. You won't need to change the domain's real dns for this, you can add the alias to your /etc/hosts file:
Kinesis Freestyle (Terrible key switches. Mushy and un-lovable)
Kinesis Freestyle Edge (Traditional layout with too many keys, mech switches, proably too big to be tented easily/properly)
Matias Ergo Pro (Looks pretty great. Have not tried.)
ErgoDox Kit (Currently, my everyday keyboard. Can buy pre-assembled on eBay.)
ErgoDox EZ (Prolly the best option for most people.)
// check version | |
node -v || node --version | |
// list locally installed versions of node | |
nvm ls | |
// list remove available versions of node | |
nvm ls-remote | |
// install specific version of node |