As a freelancer, I build a lot of web sites. That's a lot of code changes to track. Thankfully, a Git-enabled workflow with proper branching makes short work of project tracking. I can easily see development features in branches as well as a snapshot of the sites' production code. A nice addition to that workflow is that ability to use Git to push updates to any of the various sites I work on while committing changes.
from django.contrib import admin | |
from polls.models import Poll, Choice | |
from django.contrib.auth.models import User | |
from django.contrib.admin import AdminSite | |
from polls.views import index | |
class MyAdminSite(AdminSite): |
import SwiftUI | |
import CoreData | |
let appTransactionAuthorName = "app" | |
@main | |
struct ZenJournalApp: App { | |
var body: some Scene { | |
WindowGroup { |
Here are the simple steps needed to create a deployment from your lokal GIT repository to a server based on this in-depth tutorial.
You are developing in a working-copy on your local machine, lets say on the master branch. Most of the time, people would push code to a remote server like github.com or gitlab.com and pull or export it to a production server. Or you use a service like my Deepl.io to act upon a Web-Hook that's triggered that service.
Aerobase | Keycloak | WSO2 Identity Server | Gluu | CAS | OpenAM | Shibboleth IdP | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
OpenID Connect/OAuth support | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | third-party |
Multi-factor authentication | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes |
Admin UI | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | no |
OpenJDK support | yes | yes | yes | yes | no | ||
Identity brokering | yes | yes | yes | ||||
Middleware | NGINX, Wildfly | Wildfly, JBOSS | WSO2 Carbon | Jetty, Apache HTTPD | any Java app server | any Java app server | Jetty, Tomc |
<!DOCTYPE html> | |
<html> | |
<head> | |
<meta charset="UTF-8"> | |
<title>BrowserView Demo</title> | |
</head> | |
<body> | |
<h1>BrowserView Demo</h1> | |
<button>Toggle BrowserView</button> |
I was looking for a SSR and scoped styles ready solution to implement inline SVG with Nuxt
You need svg-inline-loader
and xmldom
to be installed.
Red [needs: 'view] | |
CRLF: copy "^M^/" ;; constant for 0D 0A line feed | |
;;------------------------------------ | |
crypt: func ["function to en- or decrypt message from textarea tx1" | |
/decrypt "decrypting switch/refinement" ][ | |
;;------------------------------------ | |
;; when decrypting we have to remove the superflous newlines | |
;; and undo the base64 encoding first ... |
#!/bin/bash | |
# source: https://gist.github.com/francoisromain/58cabf43c2977e48ef0804848dee46c3 | |
# and another script to delete the directories created by this script | |
# project-delete.sh: https://gist.github.com/francoisromain/e28069c18ebe8f3244f8e4bf2af6b2cb | |
# Call this file with `bash ./project-create.sh project-name` | |
# - project-name is mandatory | |
# This will creates 4 directories and a git `post-receive` hook. |
Using the REST API to upload a file to WordPress is
quite simple. All you need is to send the file in a
POST
-Request to the wp/v2/media
route.
There are two ways of sending a file. The first method simply sends the file in the body of the request. The following PHP script shows the basic principle: