This configuration is not maintained anymore. You should think twice before using it, Breaking change and security issue will likely eventually happens as any abandonned project.
Kris Nuttycombe asks:
I genuinely wish I understood the appeal of unityped languages better. Can someone who really knows both well-typed and unityped explain?
I think the terms well-typed and unityped are a bit of question-begging here (you might as well say good-typed versus bad-typed), so instead I will say statically-typed and dynamically-typed.
I'm going to approach this article using Scala to stand-in for static typing and Python for dynamic typing. I feel like I am credibly proficient both languages: I don't currently write a lot of Python, but I still have affection for the language, and have probably written hundreds of thousands of lines of Python code over the years.
(C) 2015 by Derek Hunziker, (C) 2017 by AppsOn
As of releasing MongoDB 3.4 and C# Driver v2.4, original cheatsheet by Derek is outdated. In addition, it has some deficiencies like connecting to MongoDB, creating indexes, etc. This updated version works fine with C# Driver v2.4.7 and MongoDB v3.4.
Note: Defined models and collections will be used in entire cheatsheet.
There are at least two valid, signed TLS certificates that are bundled with publicly available Netgear device firmware.
These certificates are trusted by browsers on all platforms, but will surely be added to revocation lists shortly.
The firmware images that contained these certificates along with their private keys were publicly available for download through Netgear's support website, without authentication; thus anyone in the world could have retrieved these keys.
This document now exists on the official ASP.NET core docs page.
- Application
- Request Handling
/** | |
* Type definitions for Appwrite Functions. | |
* | |
* **Compatible with Appwrite `1.5.x` & `1.6.x`.** | |
* | |
* Provides typed interfaces for the request handling context in Appwrite cloud functions. | |
*/ | |
/** |