A lot of GitHub projects need to have pretty math formulas in READMEs, wikis or other markdown pages. The desired approach would be to just write inline LaTeX-style formulas like this:
$e^{i \pi} = -1$A lot of GitHub projects need to have pretty math formulas in READMEs, wikis or other markdown pages. The desired approach would be to just write inline LaTeX-style formulas like this:
$e^{i \pi} = -1$| /* Example of how to obtain the public key through | |
| * a private key using a keystore | |
| */ | |
| /* Requires needed. You have to install the following | |
| * packages | |
| * npm install [email protected] [email protected] | |
| */ | |
| const Wallet = require('ethereumjs-wallet') | |
| const keythereum = require('keythereum') |
The Docker daemon binds to a Unix socket instead of a TCP port. By default that Unix socket is owned by the user root and other users can only access it using sudo. The Docker daemon always runs as the root user.
If you don’t want to preface the docker command with sudo, create a Unix group called docker and add users to it. When the Docker daemon starts, it creates a Unix socket accessible by members of the docker group.
Warning: The
dockergroup grants privileges equivalent to therootuser. For details on how this impacts security in your system, see Docker Daemon Attack Surface.
Note: To run Docker without root privileges, see Run the Docker daemon as a non-root user (Rootless mode) .
| git_branch() { | |
| git branch 2> /dev/null | sed -e '/^[^*]/d' -e 's/* \(.*\)/(\1)/' | |
| } | |
| export PS1="${PS1:0:${#PS1}-3}\$(git_branch)\$ " |