Keybinding | Action |
---|---|
Alt + f/b | Move cursor to previous/next word |
Ctrl + a/e | Move cursor to beginning/end of command |
Ctrl + xx | Toggle between the start of line and current cursor position |
sudo rm -rf /Applications/Tuxera\ Disk\ Manager.app | |
sudo rm -rf /Library/Application\ Support/Tuxera\ NTFS | |
sudo rm -rf /Library/Filesystems/fusefs_txantfs.fs |
{ | |
"categories": [ | |
{ | |
"name": "Movies", | |
"videos": [ | |
{ | |
"description": "Big Buck Bunny tells the story of a giant rabbit with a heart bigger than himself. When one sunny day three rodents rudely harass him, something snaps... and the rabbit ain't no bunny anymore! In the typical cartoon tradition he prepares the nasty rodents a comical revenge.\n\nLicensed under the Creative Commons Attribution license\nhttp://www.bigbuckbunny.org", | |
"sources": [ | |
"http://commondatastorage.googleapis.com/gtv-videos-bucket/sample/BigBuckBunny.mp4" | |
], |
I spent a few hours chasing down just how to get my static assets (css, fonts, images) to load in an Electron app built using electron-forge v6 (https://www.electronforge.io/) and its webpack plugin (https://www.electronforge.io/config/plugins/webpack) while in development mode. There really isn't any documentation available online, either in the electron-forge documentation or in places like blogs or gists or stackoverflow. So I thought I'd put it down here.
Load CopyWebpackPlugin
npm i -D copy-webpack-plugin
Use the plugin to move your directories into place.
// Example of using multiple / nested `createEntityAdapter` calls within a single Redux Toolkit slice | |
interface Message { | |
id: string; | |
roomId: string; | |
text: string; | |
timestamp: string; | |
username: string; | |
} |
A simple "1-click" javascript approach to downloading a scanned book from archive.org to read at your leisure on the device of your choosing w/out having to manually screenshot every pages of the book by hand. In short it's a glorified "Save Image As..." approach but consolidated down to "1 click". BTW there may be a much better option than this out there - I just built this as an autistic project to see if it would work.
By using this script you agree to delete all book files/images after your 1 hour or 14 days is up! I don't support using this script for any other use cases. After all, none of us have ever kept a library book past it's return date, right?
{ | |
"explorer.fileNesting.enabled": true, | |
"explorer.fileNesting.patterns": { | |
"*.js": "${capture}.js.map, ${capture}.d.ts, ${capture}.d.ts.map", | |
"*.ts": "$(capture).test.ts, $(capture).test.tsx, $(capture).test.node.ts, $(capture).test.node.tsx, $(capture).test.native.ts, $(capture).test.native.tsx, $(capture).test.ios.ts, $(capture).test.ios.tsx, $(capture).test.web.ts, $(capture).test.web.tsx, $(capture).test.android.ts, $(capture).test.android.tsx, ${capture}.native.tsx, ${capture}.ios.tsx, ${capture}.android.tsx, ${capture}.web.tsx, ${capture}.native.ts, ${capture}.ios.ts, ${capture}.android.ts, ${capture}.web.ts, ${capture}.native.js, ${capture}.ios.js, ${capture}.android.js, ${capture}.web.js, ${capture}.native.jsx, ${capture}.ios.jsx, ${capture}.android.jsx, ${capture}.web.jsx", | |
"*.tsx": "$(capture).test.ts, $(capture).test.tsx, $(capture).test.node.ts, $(capture).test.node.tsx, $(capture).test.native.ts, $(capture).test.native.tsx, $(capture).test.ios.ts, $(capture).test.ios.tsx, $(captur |