Having both Node.js and io.js installed with NVM was giving me a load of problems, mainly with npm. So I uninstalled NVM and manage Node.js and io.js with homebrew.
Heres how.
Install Node.js and io.js
$ brew install node
$ brew install iojs
# First install tmux | |
brew install tmux | |
# For mouse support (for switching panes and windows) | |
# Only needed if you are using Terminal.app (iTerm has mouse support) | |
Install https://github.com/norio-nomura/EasySIMBL/ | |
Then install https://bitheap.org/mouseterm/ | |
# More on mouse support http://floriancrouzat.net/2010/07/run-tmux-with-mouse-support-in-mac-os-x-terminal-app/ |
module.exports = { | |
'can log in at vimeo': function (test) { | |
'use strict'; | |
test.expect(1) | |
.open('http://vimeo.com/log_in') | |
.type('#email', 'foo@bar.com') | |
.type('#password', 'baz') | |
.click('.submit .btn') | |
.assert.text('#page_header h1 a', 'foobar') |
describe('Test example.com', function(){ | |
before(function(done) { | |
client.init().url('http://example.com', done); | |
}); | |
describe('Check homepage', function(){ | |
it('should see the correct title', function(done) { | |
client.getTitle(function(err, title){ | |
expect(title).to.have.string('Example Domain'); | |
done(); |
// Use Gists to store code you would like to remember later on | |
console.log(window); // log the "window" object to the console |
Having both Node.js and io.js installed with NVM was giving me a load of problems, mainly with npm. So I uninstalled NVM and manage Node.js and io.js with homebrew.
Heres how.
Install Node.js and io.js
$ brew install node
$ brew install iojs
// Simulate a call to Dropbox or other service that can | |
// return an image as an ArrayBuffer. | |
var xhr = new XMLHttpRequest(); | |
// Use JSFiddle logo as a sample image to avoid complicating | |
// this example with cross-domain issues. | |
xhr.open( "GET", "http://fiddle.jshell.net/img/logo.png", true ); | |
// Ask for the result as an ArrayBuffer. | |
xhr.responseType = "arraybuffer"; |
Unicode table - List of most common Unicode characters * | |
* This summary list contains about 2000 characters for most common ocidental/latin languages and most printable symbols but not chinese, japanese, arab, archaic and some unprintable. | |
Contains character codes in HEX (hexadecimal), decimal number, name/description and corresponding printable symbol. | |
What is Unicode? | |
Unicode is a standard created to define letters of all languages and characters such as punctuation and technical symbols. Today, UNICODE (UTF-8) is the most used character set encoding (used by almost 70% of websites, in 2013). The second most used character set is ISO-8859-1 (about 20% of websites), but this old encoding format is being replaced by Unicode. | |
How to identify the Unicode number for a character? | |
Type or paste a character: |