- Create a gist if you haven't already.
- Clone your gist:
# make sure to replace `<hash>` with your gist's hash git clone https://gist.github.com/<hash>.git # with https git clone [email protected]:<hash>.git # or with ssh
#!/usr/bin/env python | |
import sys, os, time | |
import tweepy | |
keys = dict( | |
consumer_key='_YOUR_CONSUMER_KEY', | |
consumer_secret='_YOUR_SECRET_KEY', | |
access_token='_YOUR_ACCESS_TOKEN', | |
access_token_secret='_YOUR_ACCESS_TOKEN_SECRET' | |
) |
// Discord all events! | |
// A quick and dirty fleshing out of the discord.js event listeners (not tested at all!) | |
// listed here -> https://discord.js.org/#/docs/main/stable/class/Client | |
// Learn from this, do not just copy it mofo! | |
// | |
// Saved to -> https://gist.github.com/koad/316b265a91d933fd1b62dddfcc3ff584 | |
// Last Updated -> Halloween 2022 | |
/* |
-
Find the Discord channel in which you would like to send commits and other updates
-
In the settings for that channel, find the Webhooks option and create a new webhook. Note: Do NOT give this URL out to the public. Anyone or service can post messages to this channel, without even needing to be in the server. Keep it safe!
function add (a, b) { | |
let res = '', c = 0 | |
a = a.split('') | |
b = b.split('') | |
while (a.length || b.length || c) { | |
c += ~~a.pop() + ~~b.pop() | |
res = c % 10 + res | |
c = c > 9 | |
} | |
return res |
https://stackoverflow.com/a/18003462/348146
None of these suggestions worked for me, because Android was appending a sequence number to the package name to produce the final APK file name (this may vary with the version of Android OS). The following sequence of commands is what worked for me on a non-rooted device:
Determine the package name of the app, e.g.
com.example.someapp
. Skip this step if you already know the package name.
adb shell pm list packages
Look through the list of package names and try to find a match between the app in question and the package name. This is usually easy, but note that the package name can be completely unrelated to the app name. If you can't recognize the app from the list of package names, try finding the app in Google Play using a browser. The URL for an app in Google Play contains the package name.
04/26/2103. From a lecture by Professor John Ousterhout at Stanford, class CS142.
This is my most touchy-feely thought for the weekend. Here’s the basic idea: It’s really hard to build relationships that last for a long time. If you haven’t discovered this, you will discover this sooner or later. And it's hard both for personal relationships and for business relationships. And to me, it's pretty amazing that two people can stay married for 25 years without killing each other.
[Laughter]
> But honestly, most professional relationships don't last anywhere near that long. The best bands always seem to break up after 2 or 3 years. And business partnerships fall apart, and there's all these problems in these relationships that just don't last. So, why is that? Well, in my view, it’s relationships don't fail because there some single catastrophic event to destroy them, although often there is a single catastrophic event around the the end of the relation
ssh-keygen -t rsa -b 4096 -m PEM -f jwtRS256.key | |
# Don't add passphrase | |
openssl rsa -in jwtRS256.key -pubout -outform PEM -out jwtRS256.key.pub | |
cat jwtRS256.key | |
cat jwtRS256.key.pub |
(function() { | |
var call = Function.prototype.call; | |
Function.prototype.call = function() { | |
console.log(this, arguments); | |
return call.apply(this, arguments); | |
}; | |
}()); |