- makes the console full width by default
- makes the left column wider
- auto clicks the "view more" button
- adds in CSS classes for colour
- adds the correct CSS to display build logs in a more sane way
-spec get_timestamp() -> integer(). | |
get_timestamp() -> | |
{Mega, Sec, Micro} = os:timestamp(), | |
(Mega*1000000 + Sec)*1000 + round(Micro/1000). |
" deoplete.vim contains vim settings relevant to the deoplete autocompletion | |
" plugin | |
" for more details about my neovim setup see: | |
" http://afnan.io/2018-04-12/my-neovim-development-setup/ | |
" deoplete options | |
let g:deoplete#enable_at_startup = 1 | |
let g:deoplete#enable_smart_case = 1 | |
" disable autocomplete by default |
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When using Homebrew (http://brew.sh) and searching formulas or pull requests you may get the dreaded error message: Github API Rate limit exceeded
Let's fix that! (yeah!)
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After automatically updating Postgres to 10.0 via Homebrew, the pg_ctl start command didn't work. | |
The error was "The data directory was initialized by PostgreSQL version 9.6, which is not compatible with this version 10.0." | |
Database files have to be updated before starting the server, here are the steps that had to be followed: | |
# need to have both 9.6.x and latest 10.0 installed, and keep 10.0 as default | |
brew unlink postgresql | |
brew install postgresql@9.6 | |
brew unlink postgresql@9.6 | |
brew link postgresql |
- Close Android File Transfer
- Open Activity Monitor and kill “Android File Transfer Agent”
- Go to where you installed “Android File Transfer.app” (I have it under /Applications)
- Ctrl+click –> “Show package contents”
- Go to Contents/Resources
- Rename “Android File Transfer Agent” to e.g. “Android File Transfer Agent_DISABLED”
- Then go to “/Users/username/Library/Application Support/Google/Android File Transfer” and again rename the Agent app.
# VI bindings in iex: | |
brew install rlwrap # on OSX | |
echo "alias iex='rlwrap -a foo iex'" >> ~/.bash_profile | |
echo "set editing-mode vi" >> ~/.inputrc | |
source ~/.bash_profile | |
# To run iex WITHOUT rlwrap | |
\iex |
Exporting password + one-time code data from iCloud Keychain is now officially supported in macOS Monterey and Safari 15 (for Monterey, Big Sur, and Catalina). You can access it in the Password Manager’s “gear” icon (System Preferences > Passwords on Monterey, and Safari > Passwords everywhere else), or via the File > Export > Passwords... menu item). You shouldn't need to hack up your own exporter anymore.
After my dad died, I wanted to be able to have access any of his online accounts going forward. My dad was a Safari user and used iCloud Keychain to sync his credentials across his devices. I don’t want to have to keep an OS X user account around just to access his accounts, so I wanted to export his credentials to a portable file.
I will maybe someday get around to dusting off my C and making these changes myself unless someone else does it first.
Imagine a long-running development branch periodically merges from master. The
git log --graph --all --topo-order
is not as simple as it could be, as of git version 1.7.10.4.
It doesn't seem like a big deal in this example, but when you're trying to follow the history trails in ASCII and you've got several different branches displayed at once, it gets difficult quickly.