Loosely ordered with the commands I use most towards the top. Sublime also offer full documentation.
Ctrl+C | copy current line (if no selection) |
Ctrl+X | cut current line (if no selection) |
Ctrl+⇧+K | delete line |
Ctrl+↩ | insert line after |
#!/bin/bash | |
# works with a file called VERSION in the current directory, | |
# the contents of which should be a semantic version number | |
# such as "1.2.3" | |
# this script will display the current version, automatically | |
# suggest a "minor" version update, and ask for input to use | |
# the suggestion, or a newly entered value. |
Loosely ordered with the commands I use most towards the top. Sublime also offer full documentation.
Ctrl+C | copy current line (if no selection) |
Ctrl+X | cut current line (if no selection) |
Ctrl+⇧+K | delete line |
Ctrl+↩ | insert line after |
There is a long standing issue in Ruby where the net/http library by default does not check the validity of an SSL certificate during a TLS handshake. Rather than deal with the underlying problem (a missing certificate authority, a self-signed certificate, etc.) one tends to see bad hacks everywhere. This can lead to problems down the road.
From what I can see the OpenSSL library that Rails Installer delivers has no certificate authorities defined. So, let's go fetch some from the curl website. And since this is for ruby, why don't we download and install the file with a ruby script?
Verifying my Blockstack ID is secured with the address 1D7DcGCj9BeamNjwBt9v6LrcUpR4ojUNdN https://explorer.blockstack.org/address/1D7DcGCj9BeamNjwBt9v6LrcUpR4ojUNdN |