Standard escape codes are prefixed with Escape
:
- Ctrl-Key:
^[
- Octal:
\033
- Unicode:
\u001b
- Hexadecimal:
\x1B
- Decimal:
27
The package that linked you here is now pure ESM. It cannot be require()
'd from CommonJS.
This means you have the following choices:
import foo from 'foo'
instead of const foo = require('foo')
to import the package. You also need to put "type": "module"
in your package.json and more. Follow the below guide.await import(…)
from CommonJS instead of require(…)
.<?php | |
// half-hearted CSS minification | |
$css = preg_replace( | |
array('/\s*(\w)\s*{\s*/','/\s*(\S*:)(\s*)([^;]*)(\s|\n)*;(\n|\s)*/','/\n/','/\s*}\s*/'), | |
array('$1{ ','$1$3;',"",'} '), | |
file_get_contents('linked.css') | |
); | |
// embed as a data: uri | |
$base64css = rtrim(strtr(base64_encode($css), '+/', '-_'), '='); |
Slack doesn't provide an easy way to extract custom emoji from a team. (Especially teams with thousands of custom emoji) This Gist walks you through a relatively simple approach to get your emoji out.
If you're an admin of your own team, you can get the list of emoji directly using this API: https://api.slack.com/methods/emoji.list. Once you have it, skip to Step 3
HOWEVER! This gist is intended for people who don't have admin access, nor access tokens for using that list.
Follow along...
# delete local tag '12345' | |
git tag -d 12345 | |
# delete remote tag '12345' (eg, GitHub version too) | |
git push origin :refs/tags/12345 | |
# alternative approach | |
git push --delete origin tagName | |
git tag -d tagName |
import React from 'react'; | |
const ConditionalWrap = ({condition, wrap, children}) => condition ? wrap(children) : children; | |
const Header = ({shouldLinkToHome}) => ( | |
<div> | |
<ConditionalWrap | |
condition={shouldLinkToHome} | |
wrap={children => <a href="/">{children}</a>} | |
> |
Example of an automated script that does most of this: https://github.com/surpher/PactSwiftMockServer/blob/fb8148866bb05f49a0b1dcaae66c67bad1e7eca7/Support/build_rust_dependencies
curl https://sh.rustup.rs -sSf | sh
ANSI escape codes can be printed to a shell to as instructions. The below is a list of codes I have used often in my CLI programs and I find myself looking up over and over again.
A great article about it can be found here.