command | usage |
---|---|
git init | Creates an empty Git repository in the specified directory. |
git clone | Clones a repository located at onto your local machine. |
git add | Stages only the specified changes for the |
#!/usr/bin/env python | |
# | |
# Convert .itermcolors files to hex colors for html | |
import sys | |
import xml.etree.ElementTree as ET | |
def rgb_to_hex(rgb): | |
return '#%02x%02x%02x' % rgb |
#!/usr/bin/env python3 | |
# | |
# Convert .itermcolors files to kitty terminal color settings. | |
# Modded from https://gist.github.com/MSylvia/4e90860743f1a4de187d | |
# Might need to adjust dicts[i][NUMBER].text per your file. | |
import sys | |
import xml.etree.ElementTree as ET | |
def rgb_to_hex(rgb): |
@media screen and (max-width: 991px) { | |
/* Your responsive CSS */ | |
} | |
@media screen and (max-width: 767px) { | |
/* Your responsive CSS */ | |
} | |
@media screen and (max-width: 479px) { | |
/* Your responsive CSS */ | |
} |
10000ft | |
ActiveCollab | |
Additor | |
Aha! | |
Airtable | |
Amazing Marvin | |
Android Messages | |
Any.do | |
AnywhereWorks | |
Arc Studio Pro |
# This is the target module which will be overwritten after dynamic compilation | |
# You'll be using this to read configuration in your code. For instance, if you | |
# have a configuration key called `:redis_timeout`, you could read it using | |
# `MM.Config.get(:redis_timeout)` | |
defmodule MM.Config do | |
# we use a default implementation which raises an error when our code tries | |
# to read configuration before it is compiled. | |
def get(_key), do: raise("Config has not been compiled yet!") | |
end |
Fitter, happier | |
More productive | |
Comfortable | |
Not drinking too much | |
Regular exercise at the gym, three days a week | |
Getting on better with your associate employee contemporaries | |
At ease | |
Eating well, no more microwave dinners and saturated fats | |
A patient, better driver | |
A safer car, baby smiling in back seat |
defmodule MdToolbox.Api.SoapMethod do | |
alias __MODULE__ | |
alias MdToolbox.Api.Request | |
@doc "Builds the request from params" | |
@callback build_request(params :: list()) :: map() | |
@doc "Parses the request's response into data" | |
@callback parse_response(request :: Request.t()) :: Request.t() | |
This guide was written because I don't particularly enjoy deploying Phoenix (or Elixir for that matter) applications. It's not easy. Primarily, I don't have a lot of money to spend on a nice, fancy VPS so compiling my Phoenix apps on my VPS often isn't an option. For that, we have Distillery releases. However, that requires me to either have a separate server for staging to use as a build server, or to keep a particular version of Erlang installed on my VPS, neither of which sound like great options to me and they all have the possibilities of version mismatches with ERTS. In addition to all this, theres a whole lot of configuration which needs to be done to setup a Phoenix app for deployment, and it's hard to remember.
For that reason, I wanted to use Docker so that all of my deployments would be automated and reproducable. In addition, Docker would allow me to have reproducable builds for my releases. I could build my releases on any machine that I wanted in a contai
--============================== | |
-- Send Keynote Text to Desktop Markdown File | |
-- Writted By: Richard Dooling https://github.com/RichardDooling/ | |
-- Based on | |
-- Send Keynote Presenter Notes to Evernote | |
-- Version 1.0.1 | |
-- Written By: Ben Waldie <ben@automatedworkflows.com> | |
-- http://www.automatedworkflows.com | |
-- Version 1.0.0 - Initial release |