This file will setup Wordpress, MySQL & PHPMyAdmin with a single command. Add the code below to a file called "docker-compose.yaml" and run the command
$ docker-compose up -d
# To Tear Down
$ docker-compose down --volumes
| // JS array equivalents to C# LINQ methods - by Dan B. | |
| // Here's a simple array of "person" objects | |
| var people = [ | |
| { name: "John", age: 20 }, | |
| { name: "Mary", age: 35 }, | |
| { name: "Arthur", age: 78 }, | |
| { name: "Mike", age: 27 }, | |
| { name: "Judy", age: 42 }, | |
| { name: "Tim", age: 8 } |
| <!DOCTYPE HTML> | |
| <html lang="en-US"> | |
| <head> | |
| <meta charset="UTF-8"> | |
| <title>test upload by chunk</title> | |
| </head> | |
| <body> | |
| <input type="file" id="f" /> | |
| <script src="script.js"></script> |
| // time and time end | |
| console.time("This"); | |
| let total = 0; | |
| for (let j = 0; j < 10000; j++) { | |
| total += j | |
| } | |
| console.log("Result", total); | |
| console.timeEnd("This"); | |
| // Memory |
| using System; | |
| using ServiceStack; | |
| using ServiceStack.Text; | |
| using ServiceStack.OrmLite; | |
| using ServiceStack.OrmLite.Sqlite; | |
| using ServiceStack.DataAnnotations; | |
| var dbFactory = new OrmLiteConnectionFactory(":memory:", SqliteDialect.Provider); | |
| var db = dbFactory.Open(); // Open ADO.NET DB Connection |
NDJSON is a convenient format for storing or streaming structured data that may be processed one record at a time.
cat test.json | jq -c '.[]' > testNDJSON.json
| # Compiled source # | |
| ################### | |
| *.com | |
| *.class | |
| *.dll | |
| *.exe | |
| *.o | |
| *.so | |
| # Packages # |
Just run this from your Mac terminal and it'll drop you in a container with full permissions on the Moby VM. This also works for Docker for Windows for getting in Moby Linux VM (doesn't work for Windows Containers).
docker run -it --rm --privileged --pid=host justincormack/nsenter1
more info: https://github.com/justincormack/nsenter1
If you haven’t worked with JavaScript in the last few years, these three points should give you enough knowledge to feel comfortable reading the React documentation:
let and const statements. For the purposes of the React documentation, you can consider them equivalent to var.class keyword to define JavaScript classes. There are two things worth remembering about them. Firstly, unlike with objects, you don't need to put commas between class method definitions. Secondly, unlike many other languages with classes, in JavaScript the value of this in a method [depends on how it is called](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/Jav| using ServiceStack.WebHost.Endpoints; | |
| using System; | |
| using System.Collections.Generic; | |
| using System.Linq; | |
| using System.Net; | |
| using System.Security; | |
| using ServiceStack.Common.Web; | |
| using ServiceStack.Logging; | |
| using ServiceStack.ServiceHost; | |
| using ServiceStack.ServiceInterface; |