The popular open-source contract for web professionals by Stuff & Nonsense
- Originally published: 23rd December 2008
- Revised date: March 15th 2016
- Original post
| // Use Gists to store code you would like to remember later on | |
| console.log(window); // log the "window" object to the console |
Saved from Archive.org, Date: May 14, 2010 Author: Jesse Webb
Our development machines here at Point2 are not standardized; we have a mixture of Windows XP, 7, and Mac OSX/Unix computers. I find myself constantly switching back and forth between command prompt interfaces when pair programming. As a result, I catch myself using “ls” to list a directories contents regardless of what system I am on. I am currently using a Windows XP machine for my developer box and I wanted to setup an alias to the “ls” command to actually perform a “dir”. Here is how I accomplished it…
There is a command available in a Window’s shell that let’s you “alias” command to whatever you please: DOSKey. It allows you to create “macros” to execute one or more other commands with a custom nam
| #!/bin/bash | |
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