git clone git@github.com:YOUR-USERNAME/YOUR-FORKED-REPO.git
cd into/cloned/fork-repo
git remote add upstream git://github.com/ORIGINAL-DEV-USERNAME/REPO-YOU-FORKED-FROM.git
git fetch upstream
import static org.hamcrest.MatcherAssert.assertThat; | |
import static org.hamcrest.Matchers.allOf; | |
import static org.hamcrest.Matchers.any; | |
import static org.hamcrest.Matchers.anyOf; | |
import static org.hamcrest.Matchers.anything; | |
import static org.hamcrest.Matchers.describedAs; | |
import static org.hamcrest.Matchers.endsWith; | |
import static org.hamcrest.Matchers.equalTo; | |
import static org.hamcrest.Matchers.equalToIgnoringWhiteSpace; | |
import static org.hamcrest.Matchers.instanceOf; |
This is a set up for projects which want to check in only their source files, but have their gh-pages branch automatically updated with some compiled output every time they push.
You want a script that does a local compile to e.g. an out/
directory. Let's call this compile.sh
for our purposes, but for your project it might be npm build
or gulp make-docs
or anything similar.
The out/
directory should contain everything you want deployed to gh-pages
. That almost always includes an index.html
.
I hereby claim:
To claim this, I am signing this object:
#Async Eclipse Job Example
@Inject
private UISynchronize uiSync;
public void doSomething() {
Job j = new Job("Doing work") {
@Override
According to https://serverfault.com/a/277667/186338, you need the following setup for this to work:
server {
listen 80 default_server; # Ipv4
listen [::]:80 ipv6only=on; # IPv6
}
import java.awt.image.BufferedImage; | |
import java.io.*; | |
import java.text.SimpleDateFormat; | |
import java.util.*; | |
import java.util.concurrent.*; | |
import java.util.logging.*; | |
import javafx.application.*; | |
import javafx.beans.binding.*; | |
import javafx.beans.property.*; | |
import javafx.beans.value.*; |
This is a simple bash script to install Singularity.
>= 1.11
build-essential
libssl-dev
uuid-dev
pretalx is a web app for conference management, it's open source, and it's great, and you should support it!
At the time of writing, the schedule export didn't do it for me, and so I devised a quick hack to get a static version of the schedule into a Jekyll project.
Here is how it goes:
fix.py > tracks.md
below (Python 3), run in {conf-name}/{conf-name}/schedule/export/