(C-x means ctrl+x, M-x means alt+x)
The default prefix is C-b. If you (or your muscle memory) prefer C-a, you need to add this to ~/.tmux.conf
:
# | |
# Slightly tighter CORS config for nginx | |
# | |
# A modification of https://gist.github.com/1064640/ to include a white-list of URLs | |
# | |
# Despite the W3C guidance suggesting that a list of origins can be passed as part of | |
# Access-Control-Allow-Origin headers, several browsers (well, at least Firefox) | |
# don't seem to play nicely with this. | |
# |
I have moved this over to the Tech Interview Cheat Sheet Repo and has been expanded and even has code challenges you can run and practice against!
\
/* | |
##Device = Desktops | |
##Screen = 1281px to higher resolution desktops | |
*/ | |
@media (min-width: 1281px) { | |
/* CSS */ | |
node { | |
echo 'Results included as an inline comment exactly how they are returned as of Jenkins 2.121, with $BUILD_NUMBER = 1' | |
echo 'No quotes, pipeline command in single quotes' | |
sh 'echo $BUILD_NUMBER' // 1 | |
echo 'Double quotes are silently dropped' | |
sh 'echo "$BUILD_NUMBER"' // 1 | |
echo 'Even escaped with a single backslash they are dropped' | |
sh 'echo \"$BUILD_NUMBER\"' // 1 | |
echo 'Using two backslashes, the quotes are preserved' | |
sh 'echo \\"$BUILD_NUMBER\\"' // "1" |
"""Autogenerated input type of AcceptTopicSuggestion""" | |
input AcceptTopicSuggestionInput { | |
"""The Node ID of the repository.""" | |
repositoryId: ID! | |
"""The name of the suggested topic.""" | |
name: String! | |
"""A unique identifier for the client performing the mutation.""" | |
clientMutationId: String |
# Stick this in your home directory and point your Global Git config at it by running: | |
# | |
# $ git config --global core.attributesfile ~/.gitattributes | |
# | |
# See https://tekin.co.uk/2020/10/better-git-diff-output-for-ruby-python-elixir-and-more for more details | |
*.c diff=cpp | |
*.h diff=cpp | |
*.c++ diff=cpp | |
*.h++ diff=cpp |
The idea is to improve the SQL language, specifically the join syntax, for the special but common case when joining on foreign key columns.
Example below taken from PostgreSQL documentation [1]
In SQL-89, we didn't have any JOIN
syntax yet, so queries were written in this way: