(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.
(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.
The only way I've succeeded so far is to employ SSH.
Assuming you are new to this like me, first I'd like to share with you that your Mac has a SSH config
file in a .ssh
directory. The config
file is where you draw relations of your SSH keys to each GitHub (or Bitbucket) account, and all your SSH keys generated are saved into .ssh
directory by default. You can navigate to it by running cd ~/.ssh
within your terminal, open the config
file with any editor, and it should look something like this:
Host * AddKeysToAgent yes
> UseKeyChain yes
git branch -m old_branch new_branch # Rename branch locally | |
git push origin :old_branch # Delete the old branch | |
git push --set-upstream origin new_branch # Push the new branch, set local branch to track the new remote |
UPDATE (March 2020, thanks @ic): I don't know the exact AMI version but yum install docker
now works on the latest Amazon Linux 2. The instructions below may still be relevant depending on the vintage AMI you are using.
Amazon changed the install in Linux 2. One no-longer using 'yum' See: https://aws.amazon.com/amazon-linux-2/release-notes/
sudo amazon-linux-extras install docker
sudo service docker start
Answer by Jim Dennis on Stack Overflow question http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1218390/what-is-your-most-productive-shortcut-with-vim/1220118#1220118
Your problem with Vim is that you don't grok vi.
You mention cutting with yy and complain that you almost never want to cut whole lines. In fact programmers, editing source code, very often want to work on whole lines, ranges of lines and blocks of code. However, yy is only one of many way to yank text into the anonymous copy buffer (or "register" as it's called in vi).
The "Zen" of vi is that you're speaking a language. The initial y is a verb. The statement yy is a simple statement which is, essentially, an abbreviation for 0 y$:
0 go to the beginning of this line. y yank from here (up to where?)
EDIT: You can find this same updated tutorial here -> Medium
Now I'm going to list how to publish an Android libray to jCenter and then syncronize it with Maven Central:
This is my response to an email asking about Domain-Driven Design in golang project.
Thank you for getting in touch. Below you will find my thoughts on how golang works with DDD, changing it. This is merely a perception of how things worked out for us in a single project.
That project has a relatively well-known domain. My colleagues on this project are very knowledgeable, thoughtful and invested in quality design. The story spelled out below is a result of countless hours spent discussing and refining the approach.
Conclusions could be very different, if there was a different project, team or a story-teller.
#!/usr/bin/python | |
import os | |
import sys | |
import time | |
import yaml | |
import subprocess | |
import re | |
import struct |
#!/bin/bash | |
ADBShell () { adb ${2+-s }$2 shell "$1" | tr -d '\r' | |
} | |
GetAndroidVersion () { | |
local ALL_TAGS=$(wget -qO - "$GOOGLE_SOURCE/$REPO/+refs/tags/?format=text" | \ | |
tr -d '^{}' | cut -d/ -f3 | sort -u | grep -vE -- '-(cts|sdk)-' | grep -v "_r0") | |
TAG=${1:-$(ADBShell 'getprop ro.build.version.release')} | |
echo -e "ANDROID_SERIAL=$ANDROID_SERIAL\nro.build.version.release=$TAG" 1>&2 |