Edit: Shoutout to kdeldycke/awesome-falsehood.
- Never assume what's in the database is sane
Edit: Shoutout to kdeldycke/awesome-falsehood.
Live Table: https://diafygi.github.io/webcrypto-examples/
I couldn't find anywhere that had clear examples of WebCryptoAPI, so I wrote examples and made a live table with them. Pull requests welcome!
function MyResponsiveComponent() { | |
const width = useWindowWidth(); // Our custom Hook | |
return ( | |
<p>Window width is {width}</p> | |
); | |
} |
If you work with sensitive (human) data (e.g. anything that contains an identifier of an individual), you occasionally want to share that data. The most straightforward way to do so is to send them by email (and yes - we are all guilty of that!). The problem arises, if the data get into wrong hands. Let's say you send the email accidentally to the wrong person. Or worse, without your knowledge, the email gets into the wrong hands.
The good news is, that there is a secure & handy solution for this. But let's first have a look at some other solutions.
{ | |
"name": "project-name", | |
"description": "Template for static sites", | |
"version": "1.0.0", | |
"homepage": "http://www.project-name.com", | |
"author": { | |
"name": "Adam Reis", | |
"url": "http://adam.reis.nz" | |
}, | |
"license": "UNLICENSED", |
By: @BTroncone
Also check out my lesson @ngrx/store in 10 minutes on egghead.io!
Update: Non-middleware examples have been updated to ngrx/store v2. More coming soon!
Table of Contents
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*- | |
from __future__ import unicode_literals | |
import uuid | |
from django.db import migrations, models | |
def fill_mymodel_uuid(apps, schema_editor): | |
db_alias = schema_editor.connection.alias | |
MyModel = apps.get_model('myapp', 'MyModel') |
/** | |
* @param {object} scope - Object that all bound data will be attached to. | |
*/ | |
function twoWayBind(scope) { | |
// a list of all bindings used in the DOM | |
// @example | |
// { 'person.name': [<input type="text" data-bind="person.name"/>] } | |
var bindings = {}; | |
// each bindings old value to be compared for changes |
This is a quick tutorial explaining how to get a static website hosted on Heroku.
Why do this?
Heroku hosts apps on the internet, not static websites. To get it to run your static portfolio, personal blog, etc., you need to trick Heroku into thinking your website is a PHP app. This 6-step tutorial will teach you how.
LightPink1 #ffbdc5 255 189 197 {65535 | 48573 | 50629} | |
---|---|---|---|
pink4 #9d777f 157 119 127 {40349 | 30583 | 32639} | |
pink3 #d7a3ad 215 163 173 {55255 | 41891 | 44461} | |
pink2 #f2b9c4 242 185 196 {62194 | 47545 | 50372} | |
pink1 #ffc3cf 255 195 207 {65535 | 50115 | 53199} | |
HotPink4 #9e4f75 158 79 117 {40606 | 20303 | 30069} | |
HotPink3 #d878a1 216 120 161 {55512 | 30840 | 41377} | |
HotPink2 #f383b5 243 131 181 {62451 | 33667 | 46517} | |
HotPink1 #ff87c1 255 135 193 {65535 | 34695 | 49601} | |
DeepPink4 #9e1e62 158 30 98 {40606 | 7710 | 25186} |