As configured in my dotfiles.
start new:
tmux
start new with session name:
As configured in my dotfiles.
start new:
tmux
start new with session name:
Windows Registry Editor Version 5.00 | |
[HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\SimonTatham\PuTTY\Sessions\monokai] | |
"Colour21"="255,255,255" | |
"Colour20"="245,222,179" | |
"Colour19"="200,240,240" | |
"Colour18"="0,217,217" | |
"Colour17"="179,146,239" | |
"Colour16"="174,129,255" | |
"Colour15"="122,204,218" |
Windows Registry Editor Version 5.00 | |
; Default color scheme | |
; for Windows command prompt. | |
; Values stored as 00-BB-GG-RR | |
[HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Console] | |
; BLACK DGRAY | |
"ColorTable00"=dword:00000000 | |
"ColorTable08"=dword:00808080 | |
; BLUE LBLUE |
#!/bin/sh | |
SOLUTION_FILE="src/Foo.sln" | |
MSBUILD_PATH="C:/Windows/Microsoft.NET/Framework64/v4.0.30319/MSBuild.exe" | |
NUGET_PATH="nuget" | |
NUGET_SOURCE="https://www.myget.org/F/myfeed/" | |
NUNIT_PATH="src/Packages/NUnit.Runners.2.6.3/tools/nunit-console.exe" | |
NUGET_PROJECTS=("src/Foo.Client/Foo.Client.csproj") | |
$/
artifacts/
build/
docs/
lib/
packages/
samples/
src/
tests/
using System; | |
using System.Collections.Generic; | |
public class SettingsValueEqualityComparer : IEqualityComparer<object> | |
{ | |
public new bool Equals(object a, object b) | |
{ | |
// If the equality operator considers them to be equal, great! | |
// Both being null should fall in this case. | |
if (a == b) |
{ | |
"name": "my-app", | |
"version": "1.0.0", | |
"description": "My test app", | |
"main": "src/js/index.js", | |
"scripts": { | |
"jshint:dist": "jshint src/js/*.js", | |
"jshint": "npm run jshint:dist", | |
"jscs": "jscs src/*.js", | |
"browserify": "browserify -s Validating -o ./dist/js/build.js ./lib/index.js", |
# | |
# Append those lines to the user's `.bashrc` | |
# | |
# If the `.bash.d` folder exists, it would 'source' any `sh` script file. | |
# Keep your configuration organized :) | |
# | |
if [ -d ~/.bash.d ]; then { | |
for i in ~/.bash.d/*.sh; do { | |
if [ -r $i ]; then { |
You can now read this on my (pretty) website! Check it out here.
Every reason to get more HackerPoints™ is a good one, so today we're going to
write a neat command line app in .NET Core! The Common library has a really cool
package Microsoft.Extensions.CommandlineUtils
to help us parse command line
arguments and structure our app, but sadly it's undocumented.
No more! In this guide, we'll explore the package and write a really neat
So you’ve created a really neat console app, but it’s growing and you need a way to keep it all neatly organized and preferrably with some Good Practices.
The guys at Entity Framework have thought about this and structured their console app really neatly. Today, we’ll take the ninja app we built previously and make it all look pretty and stuff.