From here, we can pretty much follow the exact same procedure.
On a terminal just do the following steps:
Install dependencies:
sudo apt install build-essential checkinstall libreadline-gplv2-dev \
'''FTP server for Pythonista (iOS) | |
You can use this to exchange files with a Mac/PC or a file management app on the same device (e.g. Transmit). | |
If you use a Mac, you can connect from the Finder, using the "Go -> Connect to Server..." menu item. | |
''' | |
import os | |
from socket import gethostname |
import ui | |
import console | |
import keychain | |
import ftplib | |
import os | |
import re | |
import time | |
from datetime import datetime | |
global cur_dir | |
cur_dir = os.path.abspath(os.getcwd()) |
From here, we can pretty much follow the exact same procedure.
On a terminal just do the following steps:
Install dependencies:
sudo apt install build-essential checkinstall libreadline-gplv2-dev \
# Add multimedia source | |
echo "deb http://www.deb-multimedia.org wheezy main non-free" >> /etc/apt/sources.list | |
echo "deb-src http://www.deb-multimedia.org wheezy main non-free" >> /etc/apt/sources.list | |
apt-get update | |
apt-get install deb-multimedia-keyring # if this aborts, try again | |
apt-get update | |
# Go to local source directory | |
cd /usr/local/src |
I'm going to walk you through the steps for setting up a AWS Lambda to talk to the internet and a VPC. Let's dive in.
So it might be really unintuitive at first but lambda functions have three states.