Here is the looks and feel of your terminal once the tutorial has been applied on your system:
Using Homebrew:
package de.janhicken.cfwithscala | |
import scala.scalajs.js.annotation.JSExportTopLevel | |
object CloudFunctions { | |
@JSExportTopLevel("helloWorld") | |
val helloWorld: CloudFunction = (request, response) ⇒ { | |
response.status(200).send("Hello World!") | |
} | |
} |
Here is the looks and feel of your terminal once the tutorial has been applied on your system:
Using Homebrew:
I'm going to do something that I don't normally do, which is to say I'm going to talk about comparative benchmarks. In general, I try to confine performance discussion to absolute metrics as much as possible, or comparisons to other well-defined neutral reference points. This is precisely why Cats Effect's readme mentions a comparison to a fixed thread pool, rather doing comparisons with other asynchronous runtimes like Akka or ZIO. Comparisons in general devolve very quickly into emotional marketing.
But, just once, today we're going to talk about the emotional marketing. In particular, we're going to look at Cats Effect 3 and ZIO 2. Now, for context, as of this writing ZIO 2 has released their first milestone; they have not released a final 2.0 version. This implies straight off the bat that we're comparing apples to oranges a bit, since Cats Effect 3 has been out and in production for months. However, there has been a post going around which cites various compar
This means, on your local machine, you haven't made any SSH keys. Not to worry. Here's how to fix:
*nix
based command prompt (but not the default Windows Command Prompt!)cd ~/.ssh
. This will take you to the root directory for Git (Likely C:\Users\[YOUR-USER-NAME]\.ssh\
on Windows).ssh
folder, there should be these two files: id_rsa
and id_rsa.pub
. These are the files that tell your computer how to communicate with GitHub, BitBucket, or any other Git based service. Type ls
to see a directory listing. If those two files don't show up, proceed to the next step. NOTE: Your SSH keys must be named id_rsa
and id_rsa.pub
in order for Git, GitHub, and BitBucket to recognize them by default.ssh-keygen -t rsa -C "your_email@example.com"
. Th