As easy as 1, 2, 3!
Updated:
- Aug, 08, 2022 update
config
docs for npm 8+ - Jul 27, 2021 add private scopes
- Jul 22, 2021 add dist tags
- Jun 20, 2021 update for
--access=public
- Sep 07, 2020 update docs for
npm version
{ | |
// http://eslint.org/docs/rules/ | |
"ecmaFeatures": { | |
"binaryLiterals": false, // enable binary literals | |
"blockBindings": false, // enable let and const (aka block bindings) | |
"defaultParams": false, // enable default function parameters | |
"forOf": false, // enable for-of loops | |
"generators": false, // enable generators | |
"objectLiteralComputedProperties": false, // enable computed object literal property names |
/** | |
* Using Operator Mono in Atom | |
* | |
* 1. Open up Atom Preferences. | |
* 2. Click the “Open Config Folder” button. | |
* 3. In the new window’s tree view on the left you should see a file called “styles.less”. Open that up. | |
* 4. Copy and paste the CSS below into that file. As long as you have Operator Mono SSm installed you should be golden! | |
* 5. Tweak away. | |
* | |
* Theme from the screenshot (http://cdn.typography.com/assets/images/blog/operator_ide2.png): |
tell application "Google Chrome" | |
set tab_list to every tab in the front window | |
repeat with the_tab in tab_list | |
set the_url to the URL of the_tab | |
tell application "Safari" to open location the_url | |
end repeat | |
end tell |
I recently switched over to neovim (see my screenshots at the bottom). Below is my updated config file.
It's currently synchronized with my .vimrc
config except for a block of neovim-specific terminal key mappings.
This is still a work in progress (everyone's own config is always a labor of love), but I'm already extremely pleased with how well this is working for me with neovim. While terminal mode isn't enough to make me stop using tmux, it is quite good and I like having it since it simplifies my documentation workflow for yanking terminal output to paste in a markdown buffer.
These days I primarily develop in Go. I'm super thrilled and grateful for fatih/vim-go,
In this article I will take a very simplistic approach in understanding memory leaks and I will also attempt to diagnose them.
In todays world of abundant memory, we seldom worry about memory leakages. But I hate to tell you that we live in a real world and nothing comes for free.
Disclosure: I absolutely love functional programming. Functional programming is cool and with the new ES6 syntax it becomes even cooler.