- Pillars of Eternity II: Deadfire: Islands, pirates, rhum, and clear waters.
- A short hike: Fresh air, wind in the trees, beautiful sunlight.
- The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt: Long horse rides in the woods, wind and fresh air (if you stay far from the swamps).
- Edgar - Bokbok in Boulzac: Wander in the beautiful tiny and friendly town of Boulzac.
- Burly Men at Sea: Beard, muscle, salty fresh air.
- Old Man’s Journey: Poetic ride in an old man’s memory.
- Stardew Valley: Fresh air, and plenty of time to garden.
- [[https://store.steampowered.com/app/1174180/Red_Dead_Redemption_2/][Red Dead Redemption
Note:
When this guide is more complete, the plan is to move it into Prepack documentation.
For now I put it out as a gist to gather initial feedback.
If you're building JavaScript apps, you might already be familiar with some tools that compile JavaScript code to equivalent JavaScript code:
- Babel lets you use newer JavaScript language features, and outputs equivalent code that targets older JavaScript engines.
We dropped Lerna from our monorepo architecture in PouchDB 6.0.0. I got a question about this from @reconbot, so I thought I'd explain our reasoning.
First off, I don't want this post to be read as "Lerna sucks, don't use Lerna." We started out using Lerna, but eventually outgrew it because we wrote our own custom thing. Lerna is still a great idea if you're getting started with monorepos (monorepi?).
Backstory:
var amqp = require('amqplib/callback_api'); | |
// if the connection is closed or fails to be established at all, we will reconnect | |
var amqpConn = null; | |
function start() { | |
amqp.connect(process.env.CLOUDAMQP_URL + "?heartbeat=60", function(err, conn) { | |
if (err) { | |
console.error("[AMQP]", err.message); | |
return setTimeout(start, 1000); | |
} |
var source = require('vinyl-source-stream'); | |
var gulp = require('gulp'); | |
var gutil = require('gulp-util'); | |
var browserify = require('browserify'); | |
var reactify = require('reactify'); | |
var watchify = require('watchify'); | |
var notify = require("gulp-notify"); | |
var scriptsDir = './scripts'; | |
var buildDir = './build'; |
find app/src -name "*.js" -exec sh -c 'mv "$0" "${0%.js}.ts"' {} \; |
# A class-based template for jQuery plugins in Coffeescript | |
# | |
# $('.target').myPlugin({ paramA: 'not-foo' }); | |
# $('.target').myPlugin('myMethod', 'Hello, world'); | |
# | |
# Check out Alan Hogan's original jQuery plugin template: | |
# https://github.com/alanhogan/Coffeescript-jQuery-Plugin-Template | |
# | |
(($, window) -> |
# SSL self signed localhost for rails start to finish, no red warnings. | |
# 1) Create your private key (any password will do, we remove it below) | |
$ openssl genrsa -des3 -out server.orig.key 2048 | |
# 2) Remove the password | |
$ openssl rsa -in server.orig.key -out server.key |
ActionView::Base.field_error_proc = Proc.new do |html_tag, instance| | |
html = %(<div class="field_with_errors">#{html_tag}</div>).html_safe | |
# add nokogiri gem to Gemfile | |
elements = Nokogiri::HTML::DocumentFragment.parse(html_tag).css "label, input" | |
elements.each do |e| | |
if e.node_name.eql? 'label' | |
html = %(<div class="clearfix error">#{e}</div>).html_safe | |
elsif e.node_name.eql? 'input' | |
if instance.error_message.kind_of?(Array) | |
html = %(<div class="clearfix error">#{html_tag}<span class="help-inline"> #{instance.error_message.join(',')}</span></div>).html_safe |
It's pretty easy to do polymorphic associations in Rails: A Picture can belong to either a BlogPost or an Article. But what if you need the relationship the other way around? A Picture, a Text and a Video can belong to an Article, and that article can find all media by calling @article.media
This example shows how to create an ArticleElement join model that handles the polymorphic relationship. To add fields that are common to all polymorphic models, add fields to the join model.