start new:
tmux
start new with session name:
tmux new -s myname
A good commit message looks like this: | |
Header line: explaining the commit in one line | |
Body of commit message is a few lines of text, explaining things | |
in more detail, possibly giving some background about the issue | |
being fixed, etc etc. | |
The body of the commit message can be several paragraphs, and | |
please do proper word-wrap and keep columns shorter than about |
A friend and I had a discussion about the basic skills that are often lacking in experienced programmers. How can a programmer work for ten or twenty years and never learn to write good code? So often they need close supervision to ensure they go down the right path, and they can never be trusted to take technical leadership on larger tasks. It seems they are just good enough to get by in their job, but they never become effective.
We thought about our experiences and came up with three fundamental skills that we find are most often missing. Note that these are not skills which take a considerable amount of talent or unique insight. Nor are they "trends" or "frameworks" to help you get a new job. They are basic fundamentals which are prerequisites to being a successful programmer.
Programmers cannot write good code unless they understand what they are typing. At the most basic level, this means they need to understand the rules of
reMarkable is a paper tablet by https://remarkable.com/.
The reMarkable tablet is the best e-paper in the market. However, it does not have built-in support for CJK (Chiniese, Korean and Japanese) users.
Luckily, this could be resolved by installing CJK fonts on the tablet.
Preference > Storage > Enable USB web interface (Beta)
.Preference > About
. e.g. ssh root@10.11.99.1
Once in a while, you may need to cleanup resources (containers, volumes, images, networks) ...
// see: https://github.com/chadoe/docker-cleanup-volumes
$ docker volume rm $(docker volume ls -qf dangling=true)
$ docker volume ls -qf dangling=true | xargs -r docker volume rm
(NB: adapted from this Ask Ubuntu thread -- tested to work with Ubuntu 16 LTS branches and Ubuntu 17.10)
Unlike using VMWare Tools to enable Linux guest capabilities, the open-vm-tools
package doesn't auto-mount shared VMWare folders. This can be frustrating in various ways, but there's an easy fix.
Install open-vm-tools
and run:
sudo mount -t fuse.vmhgfs-fuse .host:/ /mnt/hgfs -o allow_other