A collection of commands that change the Arc Browser icon.
Theme | Command |
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Candy Arc | defaults write company.thebrowser.Browser currentAppIconName candy |
Afghanistan | |
Albania | |
Algeria | |
Andorra | |
Angola | |
Antigua & Deps | |
Argentina | |
Armenia | |
Australia | |
Austria |
Command Line
pry -r ./config/app_init_file.rb
- load your app into a pry session (look at the file loaded by config.ru)pry -r ./config/environment.rb
- load your rails into a pry sessionDebugger
I created a crude comparison of the syntax of the various common Markdown extensions to have a better view on what are the most common extensions and what is the most widely accepted syntax for them. The list of Markdown flavors that I looked at was based on the list found on CommonMark's GitHub Wiki.
Flavor | Superscript | Subscript | Deletion* Strikethrough |
Insertion* | Highlight* | Footnote | Task list | Table | Abbr | Deflist | Smart typo | TOC | Math | Math Block | Mermaid |
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GFM |
command | usage | |
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git init | Creates an empty Git repository in the specified directory. | |
git clone <repository name> | Clones a repository located at <repository name> onto your local machine. | |
git add <directory> | Stages only the specified changes for the next commit. Replace <directory> with a <file> to change a specific file. | |
git add . | Stages new files and modifications without deletions | |
git add -A | Stages all changes | |
git add -all | Equivalent to git add -A | |
git add -u | Stages modifications and deletions without adding new files | |
git add --update | Equivalent to git add -u | |
git commit -m ”<message>” | Commits the staged snapshot. replace <message> with the commit message. |
How do you send information between clients and servers? What format should that information be in? What happens when the server changes the format, but the client has not been updated yet? What happens when the server changes the format, but the database cannot be updated?
These are difficult questions. It is not just about picking a format, but rather picking a format that can evolve as your application evolves.
By now there are many approaches to communicating between client and server. These approaches tend to be known within specific companies and language communities, but the techniques do not cross borders. I will outline JSON, ProtoBuf, and GraphQL here so we can learn from them all.
DateTime.ToString() Patterns | |
All the patterns: | |
0 MM/dd/yyyy 08/22/2006 | |
1 dddd, dd MMMM yyyy Tuesday, 22 August 2006 | |
2 dddd, dd MMMM yyyy HH:mm Tuesday, 22 August 2006 06:30 | |
3 dddd, dd MMMM yyyy hh:mm tt Tuesday, 22 August 2006 06:30 AM | |
4 dddd, dd MMMM yyyy H:mm Tuesday, 22 August 2006 6:30 | |
5 dddd, dd MMMM yyyy h:mm tt Tuesday, 22 August 2006 6:30 AM |
[WIP] Logseq Plugin System is currently under Alpha Testing phase.
In this short guide, it will walk you through the steps needed to set up your development environment for writing and running a hello world simple inside of Logseq Desktop Client. You know Logseq Plugin based on Web Technologies composed of JS & HTML & CSS, but neither are mandatory, you can develop plugins use any language which can be translated to javascript (Logseq made by Clojurescript!). We will use Typescript to demonstrate this sample. Because there is a type definition file to make development experience even better.
Permalink: git.io/vps
Provider | Type | RAM | Cores | Storage | Transfer | Network | Price |
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