Inspired by dannyfritz/commit-message-emoji
See also gitmoji.
Commit type | Emoji |
---|---|
Initial commit | π :tada: |
Version tag | π :bookmark: |
New feature | β¨ :sparkles: |
Bugfix | π :bug: |
#!/bin/bash | |
MONGO_DATABASE="your_db_name" | |
APP_NAME="your_app_name" | |
MONGO_HOST="127.0.0.1" | |
MONGO_PORT="27017" | |
TIMESTAMP=`date +%F-%H%M` | |
MONGODUMP_PATH="/usr/bin/mongodump" | |
BACKUPS_DIR="/home/username/backups/$APP_NAME" |
Inspired by dannyfritz/commit-message-emoji
See also gitmoji.
Commit type | Emoji |
---|---|
Initial commit | π :tada: |
Version tag | π :bookmark: |
New feature | β¨ :sparkles: |
Bugfix | π :bug: |
https://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=32696#c5 | |
If you have a certificate that is not | |
trusted by Android, when you add it, it goes in the personal cert store. | |
When you add a cert in this personal cert store, the system requires a | |
higher security level to unlock the device. But if you manage to add your | |
cert to the system store then you don't have this requirement. Obviously, | |
root is required to add a certificate to the system store, but it is quiet | |
easy. |
<!Doctype html> | |
<html> | |
<head> | |
<title>Discord Token Generator</title> | |
<style> | |
.container { | |
display: flex; | |
width: 100%; | |
padding: 40px 0; | |
align-items: center; |
const waitFor = (ms) => new Promise(r => setTimeout(r, ms)) | |
const asyncForEach = async (array, callback) => { | |
for (let index = 0; index < array.length; index++) { | |
await callback(array[index], index, array) | |
} | |
} | |
const start = async () => { | |
await asyncForEach([1, 2, 3], async (num) => { | |
await waitFor(50) |
java -jar /home/expert/work/tools/apktool.jar d [email protected]
android:networkSecurityConfig="@xml/network_security_config"
attribute to application
element.<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<network-security-config>
<base-config>
FFlate is the fastest, smallest, and most effective JavaScript compressor/decompressor currently; to create it, I used a variety of modified or optimized algorithms.
The core of most popular compressed file formats is DEFLATE, or RFC1951. GZIP data, Zlib data, .zip
files, PNG images, and more all use some variant of DEFLATE under the hood. At its core, the DEFLATE format is actually not too complex: it's merely a combination of Huffman coding and LZ77 compression.
If you don't understand either of these concepts, feel free to read the following subsections, or skip to Part 2 if you already know what these are and just want to get to implementation details.
Computers think of basically everything as numbers. The smallest unit of information in a computer is a single bit, which can only be either a 0 or a 1. When multiple bits are stringed together, they can be interpreted as a ba