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.
<html> | |
<head> | |
<script> | |
customElements.define("star-wars-planets", class extends HTMLElement { | |
constructor() { | |
super(); | |
this.attachShadow({ mode: "open" }); | |
} | |
static get observedAttributes() { return ["loading", "planets"]; } |
import { FormGroup, ValidationErrors } from '@angular/forms'; | |
export function getFormValidationErrors(form: FormGroup) { | |
const result = []; | |
Object.keys(form.controls).forEach(key => { | |
const controlErrors: ValidationErrors = form.get(key).errors; | |
if (controlErrors) { | |
Object.keys(controlErrors).forEach(keyError => { |
{... | |
"scripts": { | |
"postinstall": "node patch.js", | |
... | |
} | |
} |
This is a step-by-step guide on how to enable auto-signing Git commits with GPG for every applications that don't support it natively (eg. GitHub Desktop, Eclipse, Git Tower, ...)
I created a new htaccess generator for angular apps that makes it easier for you to create the optimal htaccess file: https://julianpoemp.github.io/ngx-htaccess-generator/
The goal of this generator is to create the optimal .htaccess file for Angular apps easily. By default the generator creates an .htaccess file that solves the route redirection issue. To make it easier for you I created a kind of interview mode with some questions. As an additional feature the generator supports adding exclusions for example if you have installed a blog in a subdirectory of your web application and more!
The generator 😁: https://julianpoemp.github.io/ngx-htaccess-generator/
The project: https://github.com/julianpoemp/ngx-htaccess-generator
<!-- | |
Complete feature detection for ES modules. Covers: | |
1. Static import: import * from './foo.js'; | |
2. Dynamic import(): import('./foo.js').then(module => {...}); | |
Demo: http://jsbin.com/tilisaledu/1/edit?html,output | |
Thanks to @_gsathya, @kevincennis, @rauschma, @malyw for the help. | |
--> |
1-In the github repo on Settings > Integration & Services, enable | |
2-Go to travisCI page and enable the repo | |
3-Configure the env variables on TravisCI so that it is not necessary to save credentials on github | |
-in the project Settings on TravisCI, add the entry for netlify site id: NETLIFY_SITE_ID - <site_id from .netlify file generated on netlify create> | |
-create a netlify access token for TravisCI | |
-On Netlify Dashboard, Go to Account Settings > OAuth Applications (https://app.netlify.com/account/applications) > Personal access tokens and press New Access Token | |
-Name it anything, but to make it easier the suggestion is name TravisCI. | |
-Generate it and COPY it - you won’t see it again! | |
-in the project Settings on TravisCI, add the entry for netlify personal access token generated for TravisCI: NETLIFY_ACCESS_TOKEN | |
4-Generate a .travis.yml file in the local repo |