One Paragraph of project description goes here
These instructions will get you a copy of the project up and running on your local machine for development and testing purposes. See deployment for notes on how to deploy the project on a live system.
rebase
vs merge
).rebase
vs merge
)reset
vs checkout
vs revert
)git rev-parse
)pull
vs fetch
)stash
vs branch
)reset
vs checkout
vs revert
)// String utils | |
// | |
// resources: | |
// -- mout, https://github.com/mout/mout/tree/master/src/string | |
/** | |
* "Safer" String.toLowerCase() | |
*/ | |
function lowerCase(str) { | |
return str.toLowerCase(); |
<?php | |
/** | |
* This is free and unencumbered software released into the public domain. | |
* | |
* Anyone is free to copy, modify, publish, use, compile, sell, or | |
* distribute this software, either in source code form or as a compiled | |
* binary, for any purpose, commercial or non-commercial, and by any | |
* means. | |
* |
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.
A file below this one contains the steps for doing this with Travis CI. However, these days I recommend GitHub Actions, for the following reasons:
console.log(1); | |
(_ => console.log(2))(); | |
eval('console.log(3);'); | |
console.log.call(null, 4); | |
console.log.apply(null, [5]); | |
new Function('console.log(6)')(); | |
Reflect.apply(console.log, null, [7]) | |
Reflect.construct(function(){console.log(8)}, []); | |
Function.prototype.apply.call(console.log, null, [9]); | |
Function.prototype.call.call(console.log, null, 10); |
{ | |
"name": "project-name", | |
"description": "Template for static sites", | |
"version": "1.0.0", | |
"homepage": "http://www.project-name.com", | |
"author": { | |
"name": "Adam Reis", | |
"url": "http://adam.reis.nz" | |
}, | |
"license": "UNLICENSED", |
So there were a few threads going around recently about a challenge to write the longest sequence of keywords in Javascript:
There are, however, a few problems: