EMOJI CHEAT SHEET
Emoji emoticons listed on this page are supported on Campfire, GitHub, Basecamp, Redbooth, Trac, Flowdock, Sprint.ly, Kandan, Textbox.io, Kippt, Redmine, JabbR, Trello, Hall, plug.dj, Qiita, Zendesk, Ruby China, Grove, Idobata, NodeBB Forums, Slack, Streamup, OrganisedMinds, Hackpad, Cryptbin, Kato, Reportedly, Cheerful Ghost, IRCCloud, Dashcube, MyVideoGameList, Subrosa, Sococo, Quip, And Bang, Bonusly, Discourse, Ello, and Twemoji Awesome. However some of the emoji codes are not super easy to remember, so here is a little cheat sheet. โ Got flash enabled? Click the emoji code and it will be copied to your clipboard.
People
๐
Code is clean if it can be understood easily โ by everyone on the team. Clean code can be read and enhanced by a developer other than its original author. With understandability comes readability, changeability, extensibility and maintainability.
- Follow standard conventions.
- Keep it simple stupid. Simpler is always better. Reduce complexity as much as possible.
- Boy scout rule. Leave the campground cleaner than you found it.
- Always find root cause. Always look for the root cause of a problem.
# | |
# Based on https://hub.docker.com/_/sonarqube | |
# | |
version: "3.7" | |
services: | |
sonarqube: | |
container_name: sonarqube |
class WifiNetworksFragment : TonalFragment(R.layout.wifi_networks_fragment) { | |
// This automatically creates and clears the binding in a lifecycle-aware way. | |
private val binding: WifiNetworksFragmentBinding by viewBinding() | |
... | |
} | |
class WifiNetworkView @JvmOverloads constructor( | |
context: Context, | |
attrs: AttributeSet? = null, |
#!/usr/bin/env bash | |
# checck if pidof exists | |
PIDOF="$(which pidof)" | |
# and if not - install it | |
(test "${PIDOF}" && test -f "${PIDOF}") || brew install pidof | |
# find app in default paths | |
CO_PWD=~/Applications/CrossOver.app/Contents/MacOS | |
test -d "${CO_PWD}" || CO_PWD=/Applications/CrossOver.app/Contents/MacOS |
For some reason, it is surprisingly hard to create a bootable Windows USB using macOS. These are my steps for doing so, which have worked for me in macOS Monterey (12.6.1) for Windows 10 and 11. After following these steps, you should have a bootable Windows USB drive.
You can download Windows 10 or Windows 11 directly from Microsoft.
After plugging the drive to your machine, identify the name of the USB device using diskutil list
, which should return an output like the one below. In my case, the correct disk name is disk2
.