Every time I accidentally git commit --amend
instead of a normal git commit I have to google git reset --soft HEAD@{1}
to save the day.
Imagine you have a file called foo.txt
and your Git history looked like this:
A -> B -> C (HEAD)
// Mocked Service | |
angular.module('mock.users', []). | |
factory('UserService', function($q) { | |
var userService = {}; | |
userService.get = function() { | |
return { | |
id: 8888, | |
name: "test user" | |
} |
by Gavin Lazar Suntop @gvn
I love clean code. There, I said it. I pride myself on passing strict linting standards and keeping my code easy to read. It's not just a personal proclivity, but a choice I hope benefits other developers.
My general experience with teams has been that code style is something people care about and have strong personal preferences. Typically, at some point people get tired of dealing with inconsistency and a standardization meeting is called. This is, of course, an important discussion to have. The problem that tends to occur is either lack of documentation or lack of enforcement of the agreed upon style. Additionally, new team members or contributors may not have access to a clear set of rules.
import urllib2,os; pf='Package Control.sublime-package'; ipp = sublime.installed_packages_path(); os.makedirs( ipp ) if not os.path.exists(ipp) else None; urllib2.install_opener( urllib2.build_opener( urllib2.ProxyHandler( ))); open( os.path.join( ipp, pf), 'wb' ).write( urllib2.urlopen( 'http://sublime.wbond.net/' +pf.replace( ' ','%20' )).read()); print( 'Please restart Sublime Text to finish installation')
From here on out, use Package Control to install everything. ⌘
+Shift
+P
, then type Install
to get a list of installable packages you can 'livesearch through. After installing plugins, they should be running.
angular.module('Prism', []). | |
directive('prism', [function() { | |
return { | |
restrict: 'A', | |
link: function ($scope, element, attrs) { | |
element.ready(function() { | |
Prism.highlightElement(element[0]); | |
}); | |
} | |
} |
Save from the Etherpad: http://bit.ly/polyfilling
This is for the QCon session 'Polyfilling the HTML5 Gaps'
# Recursively add a .gitignore file to all directories | |
# in the working directory which are empty and don't | |
# start with a dot. Helpful for tracking empty dirs | |
# in a git repository. | |
find . -type d -regex ``./[^.].*'' -empty -exec touch {}"/.gitignore" \; |
Steps: | |
0. Checkout your git repo from the server (I use /var/www/carbonite) | |
1. Upload both of these files to the same directory on your server | |
2. chmod +x restart_node.sh | |
3. nohup node github_post_commit.js 2>&1 >> github_post_commit.log & | |
4. In the github admin for your repo, set a post commit hook to the url http://<your host>:8080/ | |
5. Make a commit to your repo | |
6. Point a browser at http://<your host>:8080/ and you should see the commit |
<!DOCTYPE html> | |
<!-- Helpful things to keep in your <head/> | |
// Brian Blakely, 360i | |
// http://twitter.com/brianblakely/ | |
--> | |
<head> | |
<!-- Disable automatic DNS prefetching. | |