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@DavidWells
DavidWells / reset.css
Last active June 25, 2024 18:15 — forked from karbassi/reset.css
CSS reset. Follow me on the twitters for more tips: https://twitter.com/davidwells
/* http://meyerweb.com/eric/tools/css/reset/
v2.0-modified | 20110126
License: none (public domain)
*/
html, body, div, span, applet, object, iframe,
h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6, p, blockquote, pre,
a, abbr, acronym, address, big, cite, code,
del, dfn, em, img, ins, kbd, q, s, samp,
small, strike, strong, sub, sup, tt, var,
@jeffjohnson9046
jeffjohnson9046 / git-ignore.sh
Created August 11, 2015 21:02
Remove unwanted files from a git repo AFTER adding a .gitignore. The files will remain on disk.
## I just ran into this after initializing a Visual Studio project _before_ adding a .gitignore file (like an idiot).
## I felt real dumb commiting a bunch of files I didn't need to, so the commands below should do the trick. The first two commands
## came from the second answer on this post: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/7527982/applying-gitignore-to-committed-files
# See the unwanted files:
git ls-files -ci --exclude-standard
# Remove the unwanted files:
git ls-files -ci --exclude-standard -z | xargs -0 git rm --cached
const fsp = require("fs").promises;
const path = require("path");
const { execSync } = require("child_process");
const chalk = require("chalk");
const Confirm = require("prompt-confirm");
const jsonfile = require("jsonfile");
const semver = require("semver");
const packagesDir = path.resolve(__dirname, "../packages");