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Pardeep Singh Sanghera shercoder

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###Note Apple will reject apps that are using private url schemes (Ugh, Apple....) if they are pretty much obvius. Some apps are rejected and others are not, so, be aware of this issue before implementing any of those URL's in your app as a feature.

[UPDATE : Not yet tested in iOS 10. It will fail because of policies changes in URL scheme handling.]

[UPDATE 2:The openURL() method of UIApplication is now deprecated. You should use application(_:open:options:) instead]

##[UPDATE 3: For now you just can use url schemes to open your apps's settings with Swift 3.0 (Xcode 8). I'll keep you informed when OS preferences can be reached]

@shercoder
shercoder / themes-debug.xml
Last active September 2, 2015 17:10 — forked from dlew/themes-debug.xml
With the new theming in AppCompat, a lot of assets are tinted automatically for you via theme attributes. That has often led me to wonder "where the hell did this color come from?" You can replace your normal theme with this debug theme to help figure out the source of that color.
<!-- You can change the parent around to whatever you normally use -->
<style name="DebugColors" parent="Theme.AppCompat">
<!-- System colors -->
<item name="android:windowBackground">@color/__debugWindowBackground</item>
<item name="android:colorPressedHighlight">#FF4400</item>
<item name="android:colorLongPressedHighlight">#FF0044</item>
<item name="android:colorFocusedHighlight">#44FF00</item>
<item name="android:colorActivatedHighlight">#00FF44</item>
@shercoder
shercoder / README.md
Last active August 29, 2015 14:25 — forked from gabrielemariotti/README.md
How to manage the support libraries in a multi-module projects. Thanks to Fernando Cejas (http://fernandocejas.com/)

Centralize the support libraries dependencies in gradle

Working with multi-modules project, it is very useful to centralize the dependencies, especially the support libraries.

A very good way is to separate gradle build files, defining something like:

root
  --gradleScript
 ----dependencies.gradle
import android.util.Log;
import com.squareup.leakcanary.AnalysisResult;
import com.squareup.leakcanary.DisplayLeakService;
import com.squareup.leakcanary.HeapDump;
import retrofit.RestAdapter;
import retrofit.RetrofitError;
import retrofit.http.Multipart;
import retrofit.http.POST;
import retrofit.http.Part;
import retrofit.mime.TypedFile;
@shercoder
shercoder / README.md
Last active August 29, 2015 14:20 — forked from polbins/README.md

Android REST Controller with Cache-Control

Android REST Controller with Simple Cache Control Headers using Retrofit 1.9.0 + OkHttp 2.2.0

package com.example.yourapp;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.Iterator;
import java.util.List;
import com.example.yourapp.AuthenticationModel;
import retrofit.client.Header;
import retrofit.client.OkClient;
package com.sjl.util;
import android.app.Activity;
import android.app.Application;
import android.content.Context;
import android.os.Bundle;
import android.os.Handler;
import android.util.Log;
import java.util.List;
@shercoder
shercoder / README.md
Last active August 29, 2015 14:18 — forked from polbins/README.md

Android REST Controller with Cache-Control

Android REST Controller with Simple Cache Control Headers using Retrofit 1.9.0 + OkHttp 2.2.0

#!/bin/bash
# Author: Tobias Preuss
# Version: 2014-08-01
echo "Creating symbolic links in Android SDK folder"
echo "============================================="
echo
if [ -z "$ANDROID_HOME" ] ; then

Docker Cheat Sheet

Why

Why Should I Care (For Developers)

"Docker interests me because it allows simple environment isolation and repeatability. I can create a run-time environment once, package it up, then run it again on any other machine. Furthermore, everything that runs in that environment is isolated from the underlying host (much like a virtual machine). And best of all, everything is fast and simple."

TL;DR, I just want a dev environment