- Open Automator
- Create a new document
- Select Quick Action
- Set “Service receives selected” to
files or folders
inany application
- Add a
Run Shell Script
action- your default shell should already be selected, otherwise use
/bin/zsh
for macOS 10.15 (”Catalina”) or later - older versions of macOS use
/bin/bash
- your default shell should already be selected, otherwise use
- if you're using something else, you probably know what to do 😉
// static/scripts/fixedsearch/fixedsearch.js | |
/*-------------------------------------------------------------- | |
fixedsearch — Super fast, client side search for Hugo.io with Fusejs.io | |
based on https://gist.github.com/cmod/5410eae147e4318164258742dd053993 | |
--------------------------------------------------------------*/ | |
if (typeof variable !== 'undefined') { | |
console.log('fixedsearch.js already loaded'); | |
} else { | |
fixedsearch = function(){ |
A couple of weeks ago I played (and finished) A Plague Tale, a game by Asobo Studio. I was really captivated by the game, not only by the beautiful graphics but also by the story and the locations in the game. I decided to investigate a bit about the game tech and I was surprised to see it was developed with a custom engine by a relatively small studio. I know there are some companies using custom engines but it's very difficult to find a detailed market study with that kind of information curated and updated. So this article.
Nowadays lots of companies choose engines like Unreal or Unity for their games (or that's what lot of people think) because d
#!/bin/bash | |
CYAN="$(tput bold; tput setaf 6)" | |
RESET="$(tput sgr0)" | |
clear | |
if command -v python3 > /dev/null 2>&1; then | |
if [ $(python3 -c "print('ye')") = "ye" ]; then | |
clear |
This is a fork of and builds upon the work of Eddie Webb's search and Matthew Daly's search explorations.
It's built for the Hugo static site generator, but could be adopted to function with any json index compatible with Fuse fuzzy search library.
To see it in action, go to craigmod.com and press CMD-/
and start typing.
// Copyright (C) 2017 Basile Fraboni | |
// Copyright (C) 2014 Ivan Kutskir | |
// All Rights Reserved | |
// You may use, distribute and modify this code under the | |
// terms of the MIT license. For further details please refer | |
// to : https://mit-license.org/ | |
// | |
//! | |
//! \file blur.cpp |
- Don't type or run anything until I told you so.
- This guide uses linux commands. For windows users, you can use
win-bash
I have one computer and two different github accounts. One is for work, the other is for my personal stuff. I can't use the same ssh key twice, so I have to use different ssh key for each of my accounts. How do I do that? How do I switch between these ssh keys?
#!/usr/bin/env python | |
# -*- coding: utf-8; mode: python; py-indent-offset: 4; indent-tabs-mode: nil -*- | |
# vim: fileencoding=utf-8 tabstop=4 expandtab shiftwidth=4 | |
"""User Access Control for Microsoft Windows Vista and higher. This is | |
only for the Windows platform. | |
This will relaunch either the current script - with all the same command | |
line parameters - or else you can provide a different script/program to | |
run. If the current user doesn't normally have admin rights, he'll be |
get_latest_release() { | |
curl --silent "https://api.github.com/repos/$1/releases/latest" | # Get latest release from GitHub api | |
grep '"tag_name":' | # Get tag line | |
sed -E 's/.*"([^"]+)".*/\1/' # Pluck JSON value | |
} | |
# Usage | |
# $ get_latest_release "creationix/nvm" | |
# v0.31.4 |