You signed in with another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.You signed out in another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.You switched accounts on another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.Dismiss alert
Read portably a string of arbitrary length from the console in C ( ANSI C89 / ISO C90 ).
This file contains bidirectional Unicode text that may be interpreted or compiled differently than what appears below. To review, open the file in an editor that reveals hidden Unicode characters.
Learn more about bidirectional Unicode characters
If you add emoji to your commit messages for a GitHub repo,
they become less boring, and you can convey the kind of change you're adding.
See the full set of GitHub supported emoji here
(also useful for easy copy&paste via a simple click).
how to add more utilities to git bash for windows, wget, make
How to add more to Git Bash on Windows
Git for Windows comes bundled with the "Git Bash" terminal which is incredibly handy for unix-like commands on a windows machine.
It is missing a few standard linux utilities, but it is easy to add ones that have a windows binary available.
The basic idea is that C:\Program Files\Git\mingw64\ is your / directory according to Git Bash (note: depending on how you installed it, the directory might be different. from the start menu, right click on the Git Bash icon and open file location. It might be something like C:\Users\name\AppData\Local\Programs\Git, the mingw64 in this directory is your root. Find it by using pwd -W).
If you go to that directory, you will find the typical linux root folder structure (bin, etc, lib and so on).
If you are missing a utility, such as wget, track down a binary for windows and copy the files to the corresponding directories.
Sometimes the windows binary have funny prefixes, so
Install NVIDIA Driver and CUDA on Ubuntu / CentOS / Fedora Linux OS
In this article, I will share some of my experience on installing NVIDIA driver and CUDA on Linux OS. Here I mainly use Ubuntu as example. Comments for CentOS/Fedora are also provided as much as I can.
When you use git from the command line, use the following steps:
Accessing the Repository
On Windows, launch Git Bash, on MacOS or Linux, launch a terminal.
If you have not done so on your machine, create a COMP167 directory in your home directory using mkdir ~/COMP167
NOTE: This command only needs to be run once on each machine, to create the directory.
Navigate to your directory using cd ~/COMP167.
If your repository already exists locally, navigate to it using cd [your-repository-name], if you want to check the contents of your directory, use ls.
If your repository does not exist locally, get the clone link from the "Clone or Download" button on the GitHub Repository.