(by @andrestaltz)
If you prefer to watch video tutorials with live-coding, then check out this series I recorded with the same contents as in this article: Egghead.io - Introduction to Reactive Programming.
# Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more | |
# contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file distributed with | |
# this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership. | |
# The ASF licenses this file to You under the Apache License, Version 2.0 | |
# (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with | |
# the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at | |
# | |
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 | |
# | |
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software |
#!/usr/bin/env ruby | |
# consumeraffairs/.git/hooks/commit-msg | |
# Finds the story number from the branch name and injects it | |
# into the commit message. For instance, if we're on branch | |
# | |
# BRAND-1234-Some-Feature | |
# | |
# And we had committed with | |
# | |
# git commit -m "I did some feature" |
In console: | |
git config credential.helper | |
You will see: osxkeychain | |
git config credential.helper sourcetree | |
Then if you perform git config credential.helper again | |
You will see: sourcetree |
axios({ | |
url: 'http://localhost:5000/static/example.pdf', | |
method: 'GET', | |
responseType: 'blob', // important | |
}).then((response) => { | |
const url = window.URL.createObjectURL(new Blob([response.data])); | |
const link = document.createElement('a'); | |
link.href = url; | |
link.setAttribute('download', 'file.pdf'); | |
document.body.appendChild(link); |
import { Component } from "React"; | |
export var Enhance = ComposedComponent => class extends Component { | |
constructor() { | |
this.state = { data: null }; | |
} | |
componentDidMount() { | |
this.setState({ data: 'Hello' }); | |
} | |
render() { |
(by @andrestaltz)
If you prefer to watch video tutorials with live-coding, then check out this series I recorded with the same contents as in this article: Egghead.io - Introduction to Reactive Programming.
When the directory structure of your Node.js application (not library!) has some depth, you end up with a lot of annoying relative paths in your require calls like:
const Article = require('../../../../app/models/article');
Those suck for maintenance and they're ugly.