For excessively paranoid client authentication.
Updated Apr 5 2019:
because this is a gist from 2011 that people stumble into and maybe you should AES instead of 3DES in the year of our lord 2019.
some other notes:
// | |
// Regular Expression for URL validation | |
// | |
// Author: Diego Perini | |
// Created: 2010/12/05 | |
// Updated: 2018/09/12 | |
// License: MIT | |
// | |
// Copyright (c) 2010-2018 Diego Perini (http://www.iport.it) | |
// |
Sublime Text 2 ships with a CLI called subl (why not "sublime", go figure). This utility is hidden in the following folder (assuming you installed Sublime in /Applications
like normal folk. If this following line opens Sublime Text for you, then bingo, you're ready.
open /Applications/Sublime\ Text\ 2.app/Contents/SharedSupport/bin/subl
You can find more (official) details about subl here: http://www.sublimetext.com/docs/2/osx_command_line.html
This article has been given a more permanent home on my blog. Also, since it was first written, the development of the Promises/A+ specification has made the original emphasis on Promises/A seem somewhat outdated.
Promises are a software abstraction that makes working with asynchronous operations much more pleasant. In the most basic definition, your code will move from continuation-passing style:
getTweetsFor("domenic", function (err, results) {
// the rest of your code goes here.
CREATE TABLE `makers` ( | |
`id` int(10) unsigned NOT NULL, | |
`name` varchar(255) NOT NULL, | |
`description` varchar(255) NOT NULL, | |
`created_at` datetime NOT NULL, | |
`updated_at` datetime NOT NULL, | |
PRIMARY KEY (`id`) | |
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1; | |
-- |
var arr = { | |
max: function(array) { | |
return Math.max.apply(null, array); | |
}, | |
min: function(array) { | |
return Math.min.apply(null, array); | |
}, | |
range: function(array) { |
ZIP,LAT,LNG | |
00601,18.180555, -66.749961 | |
00602,18.361945, -67.175597 | |
00603,18.455183, -67.119887 | |
00606,18.158345, -66.932911 | |
00610,18.295366, -67.125135 | |
00612,18.402253, -66.711397 | |
00616,18.420412, -66.671979 | |
00617,18.445147, -66.559696 | |
00622,17.991245, -67.153993 |
# Change YOUR_TOKEN to your prerender token | |
# Change example.com (server_name) to your website url | |
# Change /path/to/your/root to the correct value | |
server { | |
listen 80; | |
server_name example.com; | |
root /path/to/your/root; | |
index index.html; |
This entire guide is based on an old version of Homebrew/Node and no longer applies. It was only ever intended to fix a specific error message which has since been fixed. I've kept it here for historical purposes, but it should no longer be used. Homebrew maintainers have fixed things and the options mentioned don't exist and won't work.
I still believe it is better to manually install npm separately since having a generic package manager maintain another package manager is a bad idea, but the instructions below don't explain how to do that.
Installing node through Homebrew can cause problems with npm for globally installed packages. To fix it quickly, use the solution below. An explanation is also included at the end of this document.