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Show related articles based on article tags - Shopify
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Display variant inventory quantiy on product page Shopify
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In this tutorial, I will be going over to how to deploy a Django app from start to finish using AWS and EC2. Recently, my partner Tu and I launched our app Hygge Homes (a vacation home rental app for searching and booking vacation homes based off Airbnb) and we wanted to share with other developers some of the lessons we learned along the way.
Following this tutorial, you will have an application that has:
An AWS EC2 server configured to host your application
SSL-certification with Certbot
A custom domain name
Continuous deployment with Github Actions/SSM Agent
A commit should be a wrapper for related changes. For example, fixing two different bugs should produce two separate commits. Small commits make it easier for other developers to understand the changes and roll them back if something went wrong.
With tools like the staging area and the ability to stage only parts of a file, Git makes it easy to create very granular commits.
Commit Often
Committing often keeps your commits small and, again, helps you commit only related changes. Moreover, it allows you to share your code more frequently with others. That way it‘s easier for everyone to integrate changes regularly and avoid having merge conflicts. Having large commits and sharing them infrequently, in contrast, makes it hard to solve conflicts.
Recently Viewed Products with Shopify using localStorage.
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