(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.
i386 : iPhone Simulator | |
x86_64 : iPhone Simulator | |
arm64 : iPhone Simulator | |
iPhone1,1 : iPhone | |
iPhone1,2 : iPhone 3G | |
iPhone2,1 : iPhone 3GS | |
iPhone3,1 : iPhone 4 | |
iPhone3,2 : iPhone 4 GSM Rev A | |
iPhone3,3 : iPhone 4 CDMA | |
iPhone4,1 : iPhone 4S |
(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.
// ---- | |
// libsass (v3.3.2) | |
// ---- | |
$spacer: 1rem; | |
$spacer-x: $spacer; | |
$spacer-y: $spacer; | |
$spacers: (); |
// ---- | |
// libsass (v3.2.5) | |
// ---- | |
$grid-breakpoints: ( | |
// Extra small screen / phone | |
xs: 0, | |
// Small screen / phone | |
sm: 544px, | |
// Medium screen / tablet |
Adding @k1sul1's suggestion from the comments as it's more concise than what I had before:
I just wanted them all gone, so I ran this in the MySQL shell.
UPDATE wp_posts SET post_content = REGEXP_REPLACE(post_content, "\\[\/?vc(.*?)\]", "");
Note the double backslash. If you forget it, you'll replace all v's and c's with nothing, and the shortcodes will still be there. This works for other shortcode as well, just replace vc.
# Automatic nginx virtual subdomains with sub-folders or sub-directories | |
# | |
# Since the original source where I found this code is now offline, I have decided to mirror it here. | |
# All credit goes to: http://web.archive.org/web/20150307193208/http://www.messaliberty.com/2010/10/automatic-nginx-virtual-subdomains-with-sub-folders-or-sub-directories | |
# | |
# Description: In my web root directory I wanted create a folder called photos, and another called | |
# music using a sftp program. Without manually going back to the config file or to the shell I like to | |
# be able to access them at photos.nginxdomain.com and music.nginxdomain.com. That is what this config does. | |
# Redirect visitors from http://nginxdomain.com/ to http://www.nginxdomain.com/ |
const webpack = require('webpack'); | |
require('dotenv').config({ | |
path: process.env.NODE_ENV === 'production' ? '.env.production' : '.env' | |
}); | |
module.exports = { | |
webpack: config => { | |
const env = Object.keys(process.env).reduce((acc, curr) => { | |
acc[`process.env.${curr}`] = JSON.stringify(process.env[curr]); |
// Node v6.9.0 | |
// | |
// TEST FILE (cut down for simplicity) | |
// To ensure Golang encrypted string can be decrypted in NodeJS. | |
// | |
let crypto; | |
try { | |
crypto = require('crypto'); |
'use strict'; | |
const crypto = require('crypto'); | |
const ENC_KEY = "bf3c199c2470cb477d907b1e0917c17b"; // set random encryption key | |
const IV = "5183666c72eec9e4"; // set random initialisation vector | |
// ENC_KEY and IV can be generated as crypto.randomBytes(32).toString('hex'); | |
const phrase = "who let the dogs out"; | |
var encrypt = ((val) => { |