As configured in my dotfiles.
start new:
tmux
start new with session name:
var enums = {}; | |
enums.keyboard = { | |
BACKSPACE: 8, | |
TAB: 9, | |
ENTER: 13, | |
SHIFT: 16, | |
CTRL: 17, | |
ALT: 18, | |
PAUSE: 19, | |
CAPS_LOCK: 20, |
As configured in my dotfiles.
start new:
tmux
start new with session name:
angular.module('stateMock',[]); | |
angular.module('stateMock').service("$state", function($q){ | |
this.expectedTransitions = []; | |
this.transitionTo = function(stateName){ | |
if(this.expectedTransitions.length > 0){ | |
var expectedState = this.expectedTransitions.shift(); | |
if(expectedState !== stateName){ | |
throw Error("Expected transition to state: " + expectedState + " but transitioned to " + stateName ); | |
} | |
}else{ |
http://d.stavrovski.net/blog/post/how-to-install-and-setup-oracle-java-jdk-in-centos-6 | |
# rpm | |
wget --no-cookies \ | |
--no-check-certificate \ | |
--header "Cookie: oraclelicense=accept-securebackup-cookie" \ | |
"http://download.oracle.com/otn-pub/java/jdk/7u55-b13/jdk-7u55-linux-x64.rpm" \ | |
-O jdk-7-linux-x64.rpm | |
# ubuntu |
I've worked with AngularJS for many years now and still use it in production today. Even though you can't call it ideal, given its historically-formed architecture, nobody would argue that it became quite a milestone not only for evolution of JS frameworks, but for the whole web.
It's 2017 and every new product/project has to choose a framework for development. For a long time I was sure that new Angular 2/4 (just Angular below) will become the main trend for enterprise development for years to come. I wasn't even thinking of working with something else.
Today I refuse to use it in my next project myself.
npx -p yo -p generator-code -c 'yo code' |
Angular CLI version | Angular version | Node.js version | TypeScript version | RxJS version | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
~16.0.0 | ~16.0.0 | ^16.13.0 || ^18.10.0 | >=4.9.5 <5.1.0 | ^6.5.5 || ^7.4.0 | |
~15.2.0 | ~15.2.0 | ^14.20.0 || ^16.13.0 || ^18.10.0 | >=4.8.4 <5.0.0 | ^6.5.5 || ^7.4.0 | |
~15.1.0 | ~15.1.0 | ^14.20.0 || ^16.13.0 || ^18.10.0 | >=4.8.4 <5.0.0 | ^6.5.5 || ^7.4.0 | |
~15.0.5 | ~15.0.4 | ^14.20.0 || ^16.13.0 || ^18.10.0 | ~4.8.4 | ^6.5.5 || ^7.4.0 | |
~14.3.0 | ~14.3.0 | ^14.15.0 || ^16.10.0 | >=4.6.4 <4.9.0 | ^6.5.5 || ^7.4.0 | |
~14.2.0 | ~14.2.0 | ^14.15.0 || ^16.10.0 | >=4.6.4 <4.9.0 | ^6.5.5 || ^7.4.0 | |
~14.1.3 | ~14.1.3 | ^14.15.0 || ^16.10.0 | >=4.6.4 <4.8.0 | ^6.5.5 || ^7.4.0 | |
~14.0.7 | ~14.0.7 | ^14.15.0 || ^16.10.0 | >=4.6.4 <4.8.0 | ^6.5.5 || ^7.4.0 | |
~13.3.0 | ~13.3.0 | ^12.20.2 || ^14.15.0 || ^16.10.0 | >=4.4.4 <4.7.0 | ^6.5.5 || ^7.4.0 |
escape_char / | |
comment_char % | |
% This file was generated by taking the LC_TIME section from en_US and | |
% replacing date/time representation with that of sv_SE from the glibc | |
% locale sources | |
% (http://sourceware.org/git/?p=glibc.git;a=tree;f=localedata/locales;hb=HEAD) | |
% (https://www.gnu.org/software/libc/manual/html_node/Formatting-Calendar-Time.html) | |
% This file is part of the GNU C Library and contains locale data. |