- SSH into the target machine
- Make a deploy_keys folder and change into it
mkdir ~/.ssh/deploy_keys
cd ~/.ssh/deploy_keys
- Create a new key pair
ssh-keygen -t rsa -b 4096 -C "[email protected]"
Angular CLI version | Angular version | Node.js version | TypeScript version | RxJS version | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
~16.0.0 | ~16.0.0 | ^16.13.0 || ^18.10.0 | >=4.9.5 <5.1.0 | ^6.5.5 || ^7.4.0 | |
~15.2.0 | ~15.2.0 | ^14.20.0 || ^16.13.0 || ^18.10.0 | >=4.8.4 <5.0.0 | ^6.5.5 || ^7.4.0 | |
~15.1.0 | ~15.1.0 | ^14.20.0 || ^16.13.0 || ^18.10.0 | >=4.8.4 <5.0.0 | ^6.5.5 || ^7.4.0 | |
~15.0.5 | ~15.0.4 | ^14.20.0 || ^16.13.0 || ^18.10.0 | ~4.8.4 | ^6.5.5 || ^7.4.0 | |
~14.3.0 | ~14.3.0 | ^14.15.0 || ^16.10.0 | >=4.6.4 <4.9.0 | ^6.5.5 || ^7.4.0 | |
~14.2.0 | ~14.2.0 | ^14.15.0 || ^16.10.0 | >=4.6.4 <4.9.0 | ^6.5.5 || ^7.4.0 | |
~14.1.3 | ~14.1.3 | ^14.15.0 || ^16.10.0 | >=4.6.4 <4.8.0 | ^6.5.5 || ^7.4.0 | |
~14.0.7 | ~14.0.7 | ^14.15.0 || ^16.10.0 | >=4.6.4 <4.8.0 | ^6.5.5 || ^7.4.0 | |
~13.3.0 | ~13.3.0 | ^12.20.2 || ^14.15.0 || ^16.10.0 | >=4.4.4 <4.7.0 | ^6.5.5 || ^7.4.0 |
<?php | |
/** | |
* Class RD_Text_Extraction | |
* | |
* Example usage: | |
* | |
* $response = RD_Text_Extraction::convert_to_text($path_to_valid_file); | |
* | |
* For PDF text extraction, this class requires the Smalot\PdfParser\Parser class. |
#!/bin/sh | |
if [ "$#" -ne 1 ] | |
then | |
echo "Usage: Must supply a domain" | |
exit 1 | |
fi | |
DOMAIN=$1 |
/* | |
This function allows you to create singleton service that'll stay singleton throughout all the app. | |
Even(especially) if you use lazy module. | |
This covers that problem : https://angular.io/docs/ts/latest/guide/ngmodule.html#!#why-_userservice_-isn-t-shared | |
Idea isn't mine, it's how they handle it on Angular Material. I'm just creating an helper function for it. | |
Basically we create a factory provider instead of a plain class provider and inject the service into the factory function. | |
If the service is present it means it has already been instantiated somewhere in the injector tree and we can return it. | |
If injection fails and service is nulll this means we are the first provider so we can instantiate and return the service. |
No need for homebrew or anything like that. Works with https://www.git-tower.com and the command line.
- Install https://gpgtools.org -- I'd suggest to do a customized install and deselect GPGMail.
- Create or import a key -- see below for https://keybase.io
- Run
gpg --list-secret-keys
and look forsec
, use the key ID for the next step - Configure
git
to use GPG -- replace the key with the one fromgpg --list-secret-keys
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> | |
<ruleset name="Laravel and similar phpmd ruleset" | |
xmlns="http://pmd.sf.net/ruleset/1.0.0" | |
xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" | |
xsi:schemaLocation="http://pmd.sf.net/ruleset/1.0.0 http://pmd.sf.net/ruleset_xml_schema.xsd" | |
xsi:noNamespaceSchemaLocation="http://pmd.sf.net/ruleset_xml_schema.xsd"> | |
<description> | |
Inspired by https://github.com/phpmd/phpmd/issues/137 | |
using http://phpmd.org/documentation/creating-a-ruleset.html | |
</description> |
These instructions will guide you through the process of setting up local, trusted websites on your own computer.
These instructions are intended to be used on macOS Sierra, but they have been known to work in El Capitan, Yosemite, Mavericks, and Mountain Lion.
NOTE: You may substitute the edit
command for nano
, vim
, or whatever the editor of your choice is. Personally, I forward the edit
command to Sublime Text:
alias edit="/Applications/Sublime\ Text.app/Contents/SharedSupport/bin/subl"
They say that one of the pros of NodeJS is that you use the same language on the back-end and the front-end, so it's easy to share code between them. This sounds great in theory, but in practice the synchronous dependency handling in NodeJS works completely different than any client-side frameworks (which are asynchronous).
Usually that means that you end up copy-pasting your code between your NodeJS sources and your client-side sources, or you use some tool like Browserify, which is brilliant, but they add an extra step in the build process and most likely will conflict with the dependency handling of the framework of your choice (like AnularJS DI). I couldn't look in the mirror if I would call that code sharing.
Fortunately, with a couple of lines of boilerplate code, you can write a module which works in NodeJS and AngularJS as well without any modification.
No globals in the front-end, and dependencies will work. The isNode and isAngular va
DELIMITER | | |
CREATE FUNCTION uuid_from_bin(b BINARY(16)) | |
RETURNS CHAR(36) DETERMINISTIC | |
BEGIN | |
DECLARE hex CHAR(32); | |
SET hex = HEX(b); | |
RETURN CONCAT(LEFT(hex, 8), '-', MID(hex, 9,4), '-', MID(hex, 13,4), '-', MID(hex, 17,4), '-', RIGHT(hex, 12)); | |
END | |
| |