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 |
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 |
From Meteor's documentation:
In Meteor, your server code runs in a single thread per request, not in the asynchronous callback style typical of Node. We find the linear execution model a better fit for the typical server code in a Meteor application.
This guide serves as a mini-tour of tools, trix and patterns that can be used to run async code in Meteor.
Sometimes we need to run async code in Meteor.methods
. For this we create a Future
to block until the async code has finished. This pattern can be seen all over Meteor's own codebase:
HelpRequests = new Meteor.Collection('helpRequests', { | |
transform: function (doc) { | |
doc.isCancelled = function () { | |
return _.contains(['cancel-requester', 'cancel-helper'], this.status); | |
} | |
return doc; | |
} | |
}); |
packages: | |
yum: | |
git: [] | |
files: | |
/opt/elasticbeanstalk/hooks/appdeploy/pre/51install_meteor.sh: | |
mode: "000755" | |
user: root | |
group: root | |
encoding: plain |
function agg_session_count(){ | |
db.logs.mapReduce( | |
function(){ | |
var local_zone = new Date().getTimezoneOffset() | |
var br_zone = 3*60; | |
var date_br = parseInt(this.when)+(br_zone-local_zone)*60; | |
var date = new Date(date_br*1000); | |
var date_format = date.getFullYear()+"-"+date.getMonth()+"-"+date.getDate(); | |
emit(date_format,{event_ids: [this.event_id], count: 1}); |
Sublime Text 2 ships with a CLI called subl (why not "sublime", go figure). This utility is hidden in the following folder (assuming you installed Sublime in /Applications
like normal folk. If this following line opens Sublime Text for you, then bingo, you're ready.
open /Applications/Sublime\ Text\ 2.app/Contents/SharedSupport/bin/subl
You can find more (official) details about subl here: http://www.sublimetext.com/docs/2/osx_command_line.html
Sometimes you need to keep two upstreams in sync with eachother. For example, you might need to both push to your testing environment and your GitHub repo at the same time. In order to do this simultaneously in one git command, here's a little trick to add multiple push URLs to a single remote.
Once you have a remote set up for one of your upstreams, run these commands with:
git remote set-url --add --push [remote] [original repo URL]
git remote set-url --add --push [remote] [second repo URL]
Once set up, git remote -v
should show two (push) URLs and one (fetch) URL. Something like this: