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.
#!/usr/bin/env bash | |
uninstall() { | |
list=`gem list --no-versions` | |
for gem in $list; do | |
gem uninstall $gem -aIx | |
done | |
gem list | |
gem install bundler | |
} |
create different ssh key according the article Mac Set-Up Git
$ ssh-keygen -t rsa -C "your_email@youremail.com"
Create a new repository, or reuse an existing one.
Generate a new SSH key:
ssh-keygen -t rsa -C "your_email@example.com"
Copy the contents of the file ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub
to your SSH keys in your GitHub account settings (https://github.com/settings/keys).
Test SSH key:
A lot of these are outright stolen from Edward O'Campo-Gooding's list of questions. I really like his list.
I'm having some trouble paring this down to a manageable list of questions -- I realistically want to know all of these things before starting to work at a company, but it's a lot to ask all at once. My current game plan is to pick 6 before an interview and ask those.
I'd love comments and suggestions about any of these.
I've found questions like "do you have smart people? Can I learn a lot at your company?" to be basically totally useless -- everybody will say "yeah, definitely!" and it's hard to learn anything from them. So I'm trying to make all of these questions pretty concrete -- if a team doesn't have an issue tracker, they don't have an issue tracker.
I'm also mostly not asking about principles, but the way things are -- not "do you think code review is important?", but "Does all code get reviewed?".
#!/bin/bash | |
# node-reinstall | |
# credit: http://stackoverflow.com/a/11178106/2083544 | |
## program version | |
VERSION="0.0.13" | |
## path prefix | |
PREFIX="${PREFIX:-/usr/local}" |
// 🔥 Node 7.6 has async/await! Here is a quick run down on how async/await works | |
const axios = require('axios'); // promised based requests - like fetch() | |
function getCoffee() { | |
return new Promise(resolve => { | |
setTimeout(() => resolve('☕'), 2000); // it takes 2 seconds to make coffee | |
}); | |
} |
Cross-origin resource sharing (CORS) is a mechanism that allows restricted resources (e.g. fonts) on a web page to be requested from another domain outside the domain from which the first resource was served. This is set on the server-side and there is nothing you can do from the client-side to change that setting, that is up to the server/API. There are some ways to get around it tho.
Sources : MDN - HTTP Access Control | Wiki - CORS
CORS is set server-side by supplying each request with additional headers which allow requests to be requested outside of the own domain, for example to your localhost
. This is primarily set by the header:
Access-Control-Allow-Origin
This procedure explains how to install MySQL using Homebrew on macOS Sierra 10.12
$ /usr/bin/ruby -e "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/master/install)"
At this time of writing, Homebrew has MySQL version 5.7.15 as default formulae in its main repository :