Here is a list of scopes to use in Sublime Text 2/3 snippets -
ActionScript: source.actionscript.2
AppleScript: source.applescript
ASP: source.asp
Batch FIle: source.dosbatch
C#: source.cs
C++: source.c++
Clojure: source.clojure
Collection of License badges for your Project's README file.
This list includes the most common open source and open data licenses.
Easily copy and paste the code under the badges into your Markdown files.
- The badges do not fully replace the license informations for your projects, they are only emblems for the README, that the user can see the License at first glance.
Translations: (No guarantee that the translations are up-to-date)
These commands are based on a askubuntu answer http://askubuntu.com/a/581497 | |
To install gcc-6 (gcc-6.1.1), I had to do more stuff as shown below. | |
USE THOSE COMMANDS AT YOUR OWN RISK. I SHALL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANYTHING. | |
ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY. | |
If you are still reading let's carry on with the code. | |
sudo apt-get update && \ | |
sudo apt-get install build-essential software-properties-common -y && \ | |
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:ubuntu-toolchain-r/test -y && \ |
Here at eSpark Learning, we use Jekyll to host our marketing site, https://www.esparklearning.com. Within eSpark Engineering, we love automated testing - most of our codebases require a passing test suite for all changes. As we add more javascript to our Jekyll site, we wanted to add a test framework that would give us real world tests - testing that the HTML was valid was no longer enough.
To create real world acceptance tests for our site, we used a few technologies we were familiar with:
# Delete all containers
docker rm $(docker ps -aq)
# Delete all images
docker rmi $(docker images -q)
# Delete all untagged images
docker rmi $(docker images -q --filter "dangling=true")
References:
#!/usr/bin/env bash | |
# https://developers.supportbee.com/blog/setting-up-cucumber-to-run-with-Chrome-on-Linux/ | |
# https://gist.github.com/curtismcmullan/7be1a8c1c841a9d8db2c | |
# https://stackoverflow.com/questions/10792403/how-do-i-get-chrome-working-with-selenium-using-php-webdriver | |
# https://stackoverflow.com/questions/26133486/how-to-specify-binary-path-for-remote-chromedriver-in-codeception | |
# https://stackoverflow.com/questions/40262682/how-to-run-selenium-3-x-with-chrome-driver-through-terminal | |
# https://askubuntu.com/questions/760085/how-do-you-install-google-chrome-on-ubuntu-16-04 | |
# Versions | |
CHROME_DRIVER_VERSION=`curl -sS https://chromedriver.storage.googleapis.com/LATEST_RELEASE` |
version: '2' | |
services: | |
api: | |
volumes: | |
- "nfsmount:${CONTAINER_DIR}" | |
volumes: | |
nfsmount: | |
driver: local | |
driver_opts: |
Problem: how to provide Google Images with a full image suitable for display in its search results, without requiring regular users to download a large image?
Solution: link to a suitable full image in a schema.org contentUrl
property
Evidence that this works: I've tried it in a low-traffic hobby site, using static IIIF images. E.g. for this image, the schema.org entry looks like this: