One Paragraph of project description goes here
These instructions will get you a copy of the project up and running on your local machine for development and testing purposes. See deployment for notes on how to deploy the project on a live system.
Here are the simple steps needed to create a deployment from your local GIT repository to a server based on this in-depth tutorial.
You are developing in a working-copy on your local machine, lets say on the master branch. Most of the time, people would push code to a remote server like github.com or gitlab.com and pull or export it to a production server. Or you use a service like deepl.io to act upon a Web-Hook that's triggered that service.
# 0 is too far from ` ;) | |
set -g base-index 1 | |
# Automatically set window title | |
set-window-option -g automatic-rename on | |
set-option -g set-titles on | |
#set -g default-terminal screen-256color | |
set -g status-keys vi | |
set -g history-limit 10000 |
CTRL + A
: Move the cursor to the beginning of the line
CTRL + E
: Move the cursor to the end of the line
OPTION + Left Arrow
: Move the cursor one word backward
OPTION + Right arrow
: Move the cursor one word forward
Left Arrow
: Move the cursor one character backward
Right Arrow
: Move the cursor one character forward
The latest beta (3.5) includes separate color settings for light & dark mode. Toggling dark mode automatically switches colors.
Vist iTerm2 homepage or use brew install iterm2-beta
to download the beta. Thanks @stefanwascoding.
switch_automatic.py
to ~/Library/ApplicationSupport/iTerm2/Scripts/AutoLaunch
with:# | |
# CORS header support | |
# | |
# One way to use this is by placing it into a file called "cors_support" | |
# under your Nginx configuration directory and placing the following | |
# statement inside your **location** block(s): | |
# | |
# include cors_support; | |
# | |
# As of Nginx 1.7.5, add_header supports an "always" parameter which |
<details> <summary>How do I dropdown?</summary> <br> This is how you dropdown.
Most new PCs don't come with DVD drives anymore. So it can be a pain to install Windows on a new computer.
Luckily, Microsoft makes a tool that you can use to install Windows from a USB storage drive (or "thumbdrive" as they are often called).
But what if you don't have a second PC for setting up that USB storage drive in the first place?
In this tutorial we'll show you how you can set this up from a Mac.
You can download the ISO file straight from Windows. That's right - everything we're going to do here is 100% legal and sanctioned by Microsoft.
Follow the WORKAROUND: | |
1. Add a comand to /etc/rc.local, add the following line above "exit 0": | |
setpci -s 00:1c.2 0x50.B=0x41 | |
2. Add the same comand to /etc/apm/resume.d/21aspm (which does not exist yet): | |
setpci -s 00:1c.2 0x50.B=0x41 | |
3. Add the following to /etc/modprobe.d/sdhci.conf: | |
options sdhci debug_quirks2=4 | |
4. Re-generate initrd: | |
sudo update-initramfs -u -k all | |
5. Reboot or reload sdhci module: |