This re-styles your sublime text sidebar to be dark, it fits default Monokai theme.
Save the Default.sublime-theme file into packages/Theme - Default, make a backup of your original if you want to be able to go back easily.
Based on:
// 1. Open the browser developper console on the network tab | |
// 2. Start the video | |
// 3. In the dev tab, locate the load of the "master.json" file, copy its full URL | |
// 4. Run: node vimeo-downloader.js "<URL>" | |
// 5. Combine the m4v and m4a files with mkvmerge | |
const fs = require('fs'); | |
const url = require('url'); | |
const https = require('https'); |
# applescript | |
# add login item | |
osascript -e 'tell application "System Events" to make login item at end with properties {name: "Notes",path:"/Applications/Notes.app", hidden:false}' | |
# delete login item | |
osascript -e 'tell application "System Events" to delete login item "itemname"' | |
# list loginitems | |
osascript -e 'tell application "System Events" to get the name of every login item' |
This re-styles your sublime text sidebar to be dark, it fits default Monokai theme.
Save the Default.sublime-theme file into packages/Theme - Default, make a backup of your original if you want to be able to go back easily.
Based on:
In this article, I'll walk through a basic Rails (3.2.x) setup for creating a nested resource for two models. Nested resources work well when you want to build out URL structure between two related models, and still maintain a RESTful convention. This code assumes you are running RVM to manage Ruby/Gem versions, and Git for version control.
$ mkdir family # create rvm gemset
$ echo "rvm use --create ruby-1.9.2@family" > family/.rvmrc
$ cd family # install rails
$ gem install rails # create new rails project
$ rails new . # version control
As configured in my dotfiles.
start new:
tmux
start new with session name: