⌘T | go to file |
⌘⌃P | go to project |
⌘R | go to methods |
⌃G | go to line |
⌘KB | toggle side bar |
⌘⇧P | command prompt |
urlencode() { | |
# urlencode <string> | |
old_lc_collate=$LC_COLLATE | |
LC_COLLATE=C | |
local length="${#1}" | |
for (( i = 0; i < length; i++ )); do | |
local c="${1:$i:1}" | |
case $c in |
#Mobile Device Detection via User Agent RegEx
Yes, it is nearly 2012 and this exercise has been done to death in every imaginable language. For my own purposes I needed to get the majority of non-desktop devices on to a trimmed down, mobile optimized version of a site. I decided to try and chase down an up-to-date RegEx of the simplest thing that could possibly work.
I arrived at my current solution after analyzing 12 months of traffic over 30+ US based entertainment properties (5.8M+ visitors) from Jan - Dec 2011.
The numbers solidified my thoughts on the irrelevancy of including browsers/OSes such as Nokia, Samsung, Maemo, Symbian, Ipaq, Avant, Zino, Bolt, Iris, etc. The brass tacks of the matter is that you certainly could support these obscure beasts, but are you really going to test your site on them? Heck, could you even find one?! Unless the folks that pay you are die hard Treo users my guess is "No".
Interestingly enough my research shows that /Mobile/ is more efficient than **/iP(
//equivalent of "select count (distinct fieldName) from someTable" | |
db.someCollection.aggregate([{ $group: { _id: "$fieldName"} },{ $group: { _id: 1, count: { $sum: 1 } } } ]) |
var arr = [1,1,2]; | |
var arr = arr.filter(function (v, i, a) { return a.indexOf (v) == i }); // dedupe array |
# put this in your .bash_profile | |
if [ $ITERM_SESSION_ID ]; then | |
export PROMPT_COMMAND='echo -ne "\033];${PWD##*/}\007"; ':"$PROMPT_COMMAND"; | |
fi | |
# Piece-by-Piece Explanation: | |
# the if condition makes sure we only screw with $PROMPT_COMMAND if we're in an iTerm environment | |
# iTerm happens to give each session a unique $ITERM_SESSION_ID we can use, $ITERM_PROFILE is an option too | |
# the $PROMPT_COMMAND environment variable is executed every time a command is run | |
# see: ss64.com/bash/syntax-prompt.html |
<?php | |
/** | |
* Download helper to download files in chunks and save it. | |
* | |
* @author Syed I.R <syed@lukonet.com> | |
* @link https://github.com/irazasyed | |
* | |
* @param string $srcName Source Path/URL to the file you want to download | |
* @param string $dstName Destination Path to save your file | |
* @param integer $chunkSize (Optional) How many bytes to download per chunk (In MB). Defaults to 1 MB. |
Go to Bitbucket and create a new repository (its better to have an empty repo) | |
git clone git@bitbucket.org:abc/myforkedrepo.git | |
cd myforkedrepo | |
Now add Github repo as a new remote in Bitbucket called "sync" | |
git remote add sync git@github.com:def/originalrepo.git | |
Verify what are the remotes currently being setup for "myforkedrepo". This following command should show "fetch" and "push" for two remotes i.e. "origin" and "sync" | |
git remote -v |
Puts on glasses: | |
(•_•) | |
( •_•)>⌐■-■ | |
(⌐■_■) | |
Takes off glasses ("mother of god..."): | |
(⌐■_■) | |
( •_•)>⌐■-■ |