start new:
tmux
start new with session name:
tmux new -s myname
* { | |
font-size: 12pt; | |
font-family: monospace; | |
font-weight: normal; | |
font-style: normal; | |
text-decoration: none; | |
color: black; | |
cursor: default; | |
} |
SELECT | |
tc.constraint_name, tc.table_name, kcu.column_name, | |
ccu.table_name AS foreign_table_name, | |
ccu.column_name AS foreign_column_name | |
FROM | |
information_schema.table_constraints AS tc | |
JOIN information_schema.key_column_usage AS kcu | |
ON tc.constraint_name = kcu.constraint_name | |
JOIN information_schema.constraint_column_usage AS ccu | |
ON ccu.constraint_name = tc.constraint_name |
I've been wanting to do a serious project in Go. One thing holding me back has been a my working environment. As a huge PyCharm user, I was hoping the Go IDE plugin for IntelliJ IDEA would fit my needs. However, it never felt quite right. After a previous experiment a few years ago using Vim, I knew how powerful it could be if I put in the time to make it so. Luckily there are plugins for almost anything you need to do with Go or what you would expect form and IDE. While this is no where near comprehensive, it will get you writing code, building and testing with the power you would expect from Vim.
I'm assuming you're coming with a clean slate. For me this was OSX so I used MacVim. There is nothing in my config files that assumes this is the case.
upstream your-app { | |
# fail_timeout=0 means we always retry an upstream even if it failed | |
# to return a good HTTP response (in case the Unicorn master nukes a | |
# single worker for timing out). | |
server unix:/tmp/your_app.socket fail_timeout=0; | |
} | |
server { | |
listen 80; |