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André Dias da Silva diasandre

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The PATH is an important concept when working on the command line. It's a list of directories that tell your operating system where to look for programs, so that you can just write script instead of /home/me/bin/script or C:\Users\Me\bin\script. But different operating systems have different ways to add a new directory to it:

Windows

  1. The first step depends which version of Windows you're using:
  • If you're using Windows 8 or 10, press the Windows key, then search for and

FWIW: I (@rondy) am not the creator of the content shared here, which is an excerpt from Edmond Lau's book. I simply copied and pasted it from another location and saved it as a personal note, before it gained popularity on news.ycombinator.com. Unfortunately, I cannot recall the exact origin of the original source, nor was I able to find the author's name, so I am can't provide the appropriate credits.


Effective Engineer - Notes

What's an Effective Engineer?

@wojteklu
wojteklu / clean_code.md
Last active July 27, 2024 06:43
Summary of 'Clean code' by Robert C. Martin

Code is clean if it can be understood easily – by everyone on the team. Clean code can be read and enhanced by a developer other than its original author. With understandability comes readability, changeability, extensibility and maintainability.


General rules

  1. Follow standard conventions.
  2. Keep it simple stupid. Simpler is always better. Reduce complexity as much as possible.
  3. Boy scout rule. Leave the campground cleaner than you found it.
  4. Always find root cause. Always look for the root cause of a problem.

Design rules

@jahe
jahe / spring-boot-cheatsheet.java
Last active May 25, 2024 03:47
Spring Boot Cheatsheet
// Enable component-scanning and auto-configuration with @SpringBootApplication Annotation
// It combines @Configuration + @ComponentScan + @EnableAutoConfiguration
@SpringBootApplication
public class FooApplication {
public static void main(String[] args) {
// Bootstrap the application
SpringApplication.run(FooApplication.class, args);
}
}