This has been moved to https://github.com/agnostic-apollo/Android-Docs/blob/master/en/docs/apps/processes/phantom-cached-and-empty-processes.md
Some important headings are kept so that users can redirect to new link if they land here.
This has been moved to https://github.com/agnostic-apollo/Android-Docs/blob/master/en/docs/apps/processes/phantom-cached-and-empty-processes.md
Some important headings are kept so that users can redirect to new link if they land here.
0x8545
: Original 84
-> 85
0x08FF19
: Original 75
-> EB
0x1932C7
: Original 75
-> 74
(remove UNREGISTERED in title bar, so no need to use a license)Note: This is written for those using Python 3 and discord.py, so if you're using something else please reference the relevant documentation for your language or library if you choose to use this as a general reference.
On Discord, there are two different emoji types:
Each needs to be handled differently, as while unicode emoji are just simple unicode characters, Discord custom emoji are special objects available only in Discord, belonging to a specific Discord guild and having their own snowflake ID.
Many users when are given server access, do not have root (or sudo) privileges and can not simply do
sudo apt-get install python-pip
.
Here's an easy way you can install and use pip without root (or sudo) access in a local directory.
Note : This works without easy_install
too.
const toDataURL = url => fetch(url) | |
.then(response => response.blob()) | |
.then(blob => new Promise((resolve, reject) => { | |
const reader = new FileReader() | |
reader.onloadend = () => resolve(reader.result) | |
reader.onerror = reject | |
reader.readAsDataURL(blob) | |
})) |
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?> | |
<CodeSnippets xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/VisualStudio/2005/CodeSnippet"> | |
<CodeSnippet Format="1.0.0"> | |
<Header> | |
<Title>dw</Title> | |
<Shortcut>dw</Shortcut> | |
<Description>Code snippet for Debug.WriteLine</Description> | |
<Author>Chris Schmich</Author> | |
<SnippetTypes> | |
<SnippetType>Expansion</SnippetType> |
#!/usr/bin/env bash | |
# script: watch | |
# author: Mike Smullin <[email protected]> | |
# license: GPLv3 | |
# description: | |
# watches the given path for changes | |
# and executes a given command when changes occur | |
# usage: | |
# watch <path> <cmd...> | |
# |
TCL-Expect scripts are an amazingly easy way to script out laborious tasks in the shell when you need to be interactive with the console. Think of them as a "macro" or way to programmaticly step through a process you would run by hand. They are similar to shell scripts but utilize the .tcl
extension and a different #!
call.
The first step, similar to writing a bash script, is to tell the script what it's executing under. For expect
we use the following:
#!/usr/bin/expect