The following guide will show you how to deploy a simple microservice written in JavaScript using 𝚫 now.
It uses Open Source tools that are widely available, tested and understood:
- Node.JS
- NPM
- Express
c => change | |
d => delete | |
y => yank | |
s => deletes the character under the cursor and then enters Insert mode | |
i => inside | |
a => around | |
t => till a character | |
f => till a character (including character) |
The following guide will show you how to deploy a simple microservice written in JavaScript using 𝚫 now.
It uses Open Source tools that are widely available, tested and understood:
Let's start by getting it out on the table: Sublime Text is great, and version 3 should no longer be considered "abandonware" as of build 3065. Sublime Text served me very, very well over the years. That said, trying out new things is a major part of leveling-up, and in that vein Vim deserves a go. (And have you seen some of those thoughtbot guys flying around in Vim? It's awesome!)
Getting Vim up-and-running on your Windows machine doesn't have to be an all-day project. In this post, we'll walk through:
# to generate your dhparam.pem file, run in the terminal | |
openssl dhparam -out /etc/nginx/ssl/dhparam.pem 2048 |
/** | |
* Convert an instance of google.visualization.DataTable to CSV | |
* @param {google.visualization.DataTable} dataTable_arg DataTable to convert | |
* @return {String} Converted CSV String | |
*/ | |
function dataTableToCSV(dataTable_arg) { | |
var dt_cols = dataTable_arg.getNumberOfColumns(); | |
var dt_rows = dataTable_arg.getNumberOfRows(); | |
var csv_cols = []; |