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mojaray2k / postgres-cheatsheet.md
Created January 26, 2018 04:52 — forked from Kartones/postgres-cheatsheet.md
PostgreSQL command line cheatsheet

PSQL

Magic words:

psql -U postgres

Some interesting flags (to see all, use -h):

  • -E: will describe the underlaying queries of the \ commands (cool for learning!)
  • -l: psql will list all databases and then exit (useful if the user you connect with doesn't has a default database, like at AWS RDS)
@mojaray2k
mojaray2k / pubsub.js
Created August 11, 2018 07:35 — forked from learncodeacademy/pubsub.js
Basic Javascript PubSub Pattern
//events - a super-basic Javascript (publish subscribe) pattern
var events = {
events: {},
on: function (eventName, fn) {
this.events[eventName] = this.events[eventName] || [];
this.events[eventName].push(fn);
},
off: function(eventName, fn) {
if (this.events[eventName]) {
@mojaray2k
mojaray2k / handling_multiple_github_accounts.md
Created August 6, 2020 18:53 — forked from Jonalogy/handling_multiple_github_accounts.md
Handling Multiple Github Accounts on MacOS

Handling Multiple Github Accounts on MacOS

The only way I've succeeded so far is to employ SSH.

Assuming you are new to this like me, first I'd like to share with you that your Mac has a SSH config file in a .ssh directory. The config file is where you draw relations of your SSH keys to each GitHub (or Bitbucket) account, and all your SSH keys generated are saved into .ssh directory by default. You can navigate to it by running cd ~/.ssh within your terminal, open the config file with any editor, and it should look something like this:

Host *
 AddKeysToAgent yes

> UseKeyChain yes

@mojaray2k
mojaray2k / handling_multiple_github_accounts.md
Created August 6, 2020 18:53 — forked from Jonalogy/handling_multiple_github_accounts.md
Handling Multiple Github Accounts on MacOS

Handling Multiple Github Accounts on MacOS

The only way I've succeeded so far is to employ SSH.

Assuming you are new to this like me, first I'd like to share with you that your Mac has a SSH config file in a .ssh directory. The config file is where you draw relations of your SSH keys to each GitHub (or Bitbucket) account, and all your SSH keys generated are saved into .ssh directory by default. You can navigate to it by running cd ~/.ssh within your terminal, open the config file with any editor, and it should look something like this:

Host *
 AddKeysToAgent yes

> UseKeyChain yes