- GPG command line tools - https://www.gnupg.org/download/
- Git (Windows only) - https://gitforwindows.org/
- Open Terminal. On windows: Open Git Bash terminal.
Web fonts are pretty much all the rage. Using a CDN for font libraries, like TypeKit or Google Fonts, will be a great solution for many projects. For others, this is not an option. Especially when you are creating a custom icon library for your project.
Rails and the asset pipeline are great tools, but Rails has yet to get caught up in the custom web font craze.
As with all things Rails, there is more then one way to skin this cat. There is the recommended way, and then there are the other ways.
Here I will show how to update your Rails project so that you can use the asset pipeline appropriately and resource your files using the common Rails convention.
- aeson | |
- aeson-casing | |
- aeson-iproute | |
- aeson-pretty | |
- aeson-typescript | |
- amazonka | |
- amazonka-core | |
- amazonka-s3 | |
- amazonka-sqs | |
- async |
This is a quick run-through of how I connected to Redis from a Yesod site (which used the default scaffolding). There isn't much specific to Redis here, so this information should apply to connecting to any database or service from Yesod.
First, a brief intro of the basics of Hedis:
{-# LANGUAGE OverloadedStrings #-}
rails new my_great_app -T -d postgresql --skip-turbolinks | |
cd my_great_app | |
git init | |
git add . | |
git commit -m "Initial commit. Rails boilerplate." | |
#Edit Gemfile. Uncomment the reference to bcrypt and remove the reference to coffee-rails. | |
bundle install | |
git add . |