gitflow | git |
---|---|
git flow init |
git init |
git commit --allow-empty -m "Initial commit" |
|
git checkout -b develop master |
[user] | |
name = Pavan Kumar Sunkara | |
email = pavan.sss1991@gmail.com | |
username = pksunkara | |
[init] | |
defaultBranch = master | |
[core] | |
editor = nvim | |
whitespace = fix,-indent-with-non-tab,trailing-space,cr-at-eol | |
pager = delta |
// Just before switching jobs: | |
// Add one of these. | |
// Preferably into the same commit where you do a large merge. | |
// | |
// This started as a tweet with a joke of "C++ pro-tip: #define private public", | |
// and then it quickly escalated into more and more evil suggestions. | |
// I've tried to capture interesting suggestions here. | |
// | |
// Contributors: @r2d2rigo, @joeldevahl, @msinilo, @_Humus_, | |
// @YuriyODonnell, @rygorous, @cmuratori, @mike_acton, @grumpygiant, |
- Introduction to Functional Programming Johannes Weiß - https://vimeo.com/100786088
- ReactiveCocoa at MobiDevDay Andrew Sardone - https://vimeo.com/65637501
- The Future Of ReactiveCocoa Justin Spahr-Summers - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ICNjRS2X8WM
- Enemy of the State Justin Spahr-Summers - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7AqXBuJOJkY
- WWDC 2014 Session 229 - Advanced iOS Application Architecture and Patterns Andy Matuschak - https://developer.apple.com/videos/play/wwdc2014/229/
- Functioning as a Functionalist Andy Matuschak - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rJosPrqBqrA
- Controlling Complexity in Swift Andy Matuschak - https://realm.io/news/andy-matuschak-controlling-complexity/
# Tell system when Xcode utilities live: | |
sudo xcode-select -switch /Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer | |
# Set "opendiff" as the default mergetool globally: | |
git config --global merge.tool opendiff |
In this article, I'm going to explore a way that we can create views that implement custom Core Animation property animations in a natural way.
As we know, layers in iOS come in two flavours: Backing layers and hosted layers. The only difference between them is that the view acts as the layer delegate for its backing layer, but not for any hosted sublayers.
In order to implement the UIView
transactional animation blocks, UIView
disables all animations by default and then re-enables them individually as required. It does this using the actionForLayer:forKey:
method.
Somewhat strangely, UIView
doesn't enable animations for every property that CALayer
does by default. A notable example is the layer.contents
property, which is animatable by default for a hosted layer, but cannot be animated using a UIView
animation block.
o.......Open files, directories and bookmarks....................|NERDTree-o|
go......Open selected file, but leave cursor in the NERDTree.....|NERDTree-go|
t.......Open selected node/bookmark in a new tab.................|NERDTree-t|
T.......Same as 't' but keep the focus on the current tab........|NERDTree-T|
i.......Open selected file in a split window.....................|NERDTree-i|
gi......Same as i, but leave the cursor on the NERDTree..........|NERDTree-gi|
s.......Open selected file in a new vsplit.......................|NERDTree-s|
gs......Same as s, but leave the cursor on the NERDTree..........|NERDTree-gs|
O.......Recursively open the selected directory..................|NERDTree-O|
#!/bin/sh | |
# Create a RAM disk with same perms as mountpoint | |
# Script based on http://itux.idev.pro/2012/04/iservice-speed-up-your-xcode-%D0%BD%D0%B5%D0%BA%D0%BE%D1%82%D0%BE%D1%80%D1%8B%D0%B5-%D1%81%D0%BF%D0%BE%D1%81%D0%BE%D0%B1%D1%8B/ with some additions | |
# Usage: sudo ./xcode_ramdisk.sh start | |
USERNAME=$(logname) | |
TMP_DIR="/private/tmp" | |
RUN_DIR="/var/run" | |
SYS_CACHES_DIR="/Library/Caches" |
The easiest way to start using the LLVM C++ API by example is to have LLVM generate the API usage for a given code sample. In this example it will emit the code required to rebuild the test.c
sample by using LLVM:
$ clang -c -emit-llvm test.c -o test.ll
$ llc -march=cpp test.ll -o test.cpp