These determine the assumed/default size of instruction operands, and restricts which opcodes are available, and how they are used.
Modern operating systems, booted inside Real
mode,
<?php | |
class ReconnectingPDO | |
{ | |
protected $dsn, $username, $password, $pdo, $driver_options; | |
public function __construct($dsn, $username = "", $password = "", $driver_options = array()) | |
{ | |
$this->dsn = $dsn; | |
$this->username = $username; | |
$this->password = $password; |
# configure proxy for git while on corporate network | |
# From https://gist.github.com/garystafford/8196920 | |
function proxy_on(){ | |
# assumes $USERDOMAIN, $USERNAME, $USERDNSDOMAIN | |
# are existing Windows system-level environment variables | |
# assumes $PASSWORD, $PROXY_SERVER, $PROXY_PORT | |
# are existing Windows current user-level environment variables (your user) | |
# environment variables are UPPERCASE even in git bash |
ℹ️ There is a newer alternative project that does similar things and more, check it out at https://github.com/stevenilsen123/mac-keyboard-behavior-in-windows
Make Windows PC's shortcut act like macOS (Mac OS X) (using AutoHotkey (ahk) script)
With this AutoHotKey script, you can use most macOS style shortcuts (eg, cmd+c, cmd+v, ...) on Windows with a standard PC keyboard.