Erlang
sudo apt-get install erlang
Elixir
defmodule NestedWeb.FormLive do | |
use NestedWeb, :live_view | |
require Logger | |
defmodule Form do | |
use Ecto.Schema | |
import Ecto.Changeset | |
embedded_schema do | |
field :name, :string |
Windows 7 All Online/Offline [Retail-MAK] Activation Keys | |
================================================================================= | |
. Run "Command Prompt" as Administrator | |
. slmgr.vbs -ipk Product Key | |
. slui4 | |
================================================================================= | |
Windows 7 Ultimate Retail Phone Activation Keys | |
RHTBY-VWY6D-QJRJ9-JGQ3X-Q2289 | |
V77DJ-CT8WB-Y3GXT-X3FBP-6F987 | |
JC7BV-94FD2-D86PH-XRMHR-BXKDG |
This tutorial was created by Shopify for internal purposes. We've created a public version of it since we think it's useful to anyone creating a GraphQL API.
It's based on lessons learned from creating and evolving production schemas at Shopify over almost 3 years. The tutorial has evolved and will continue to change in the future so nothing is set in stone.
// this is the background code... | |
// listen for our browerAction to be clicked | |
chrome.browserAction.onClicked.addListener(function (tab) { | |
// for the current tab, inject the "inject.js" file & execute it | |
chrome.tabs.executeScript(tab.ib, { | |
file: 'inject.js' | |
}); | |
}); |
One of my favorite past times is to look at the notebooks of famous scientists. Da Vinci's notebook is well known, but there plenty others. Worshipping Da Vinci like no other, I bought a Think/Create/Record journal, used it mostly to keep jot down random thoughts and take notes. This was great in the beginning, but the conformity of lines drove me nuts. Only moleskines made blank notebooks, so I had to buy one.
At the same time I started a freelance project. The project itself is irrelevant, but suffice to say it was very complex and spanned several months. It seemed like a perfect opportunity to use the moleskine. Looking back, all my entries fell under few categories:
defmodule AppName.IpnController do | |
@moduledoc """ | |
IPN Controller. | |
""" | |
use AppName.Web, :controller | |
def create(conn, params) do | |
# PayPal requires the params returned in the exact order given. | |
# The map needs to be a list. encode/1 keep the order of a list, |
This list is meant to be a both a quick guide and reference for further research into these topics. It's basically a summary of that comp sci course you never took or forgot about, so there's no way it can cover everything in depth. It also will be available as a gist on Github for everyone to edit and add to.
By the end of this quick guide, you will know how to compile a Phoenix app release using Exrm and run it inside a Docker container. I've found only a couple of articles that discuss getting an Elixir app up and running inside a Docker container, and even those only touched on some parts of the process. The idea is that this guide will give you a full end-to-end example of how to get all the pieces and parts working together so that you are able to deploy your Phoenix application inside a Docker container.
I screwed up using git ("git checkout --" on the wrong file) and managed to delete the code I had just written... but it was still running in a process in a docker container. Here's how I got it back, using https://pypi.python.org/pypi/pyrasite/ and https://pypi.python.org/pypi/uncompyle6
apt-get update && apt-get install gdb