Service | SSL | status | Response Type | Allowed methods | Allowed headers |
---|
/* -------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ | |
// All Bootstrap 4 Sass Mixins [Cheat sheet] | |
// Updated to Bootstrap v4.5.x | |
// @author https://anschaef.de | |
// @see https://github.com/twbs/bootstrap/tree/master/scss/mixins | |
/* -------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ | |
/* | |
// ########################################################################## */ | |
// New cheat sheet for Bootstrap 5: |
- Create certificate
- Config Apache to access
https
instead ofhttp
- Config mod rewrite to generate SSL url
- Config Virtual host to test site
- Go to your XAMPP installation directory (in my case it’s E:\xampp), figure out apache folder. In this, find & run batch file
(Update: Version 3.2.0
of Jekyll looks like it's breaking a few things, so I've changed the guide to make you specifically install the version I was using, 3.1.3
. I believe this is the issue: jekyll/jekyll#5145.)
You will be using jekyll-import
to export your Tumblr site, Jekyll to (re)create it, and Surge to rehost it.
Update: You can also use Tumblr's native export feature in your blogs' individual settings. But rehosting that might be tricky. Read my comments below this post for how that works.
Demonstrates how to load SVG's as Leaflet icons via the data URI method.
Following was helpful to figure this out:
/** | |
* SVG Fixer | |
* | |
* Fixes references to inline SVG elements when the <base> tag is in use. | |
* Firefox won't display SVG icons referenced with | |
* `<svg><use xlink:href="#id-of-icon-def"></use></svg>` when the <base> tag is on the page. | |
* | |
* More info: | |
* - http://stackoverflow.com/a/18265336/796152 | |
* - http://www.w3.org/TR/SVG/linking.html |
## Pre-requisite: You have to know your last commit message from your deleted branch. | |
git reflog | |
# Search for message in the list | |
# a901eda HEAD@{18}: commit: <last commit message> | |
# Now you have two options, either checkout revision or HEAD | |
git checkout a901eda | |
# Or | |
git checkout HEAD@{18} |
I'm having trouble understanding the benefit of require.js. Can you help me out? I imagine other developers have a similar interest.
From Require.js - Why AMD:
The AMD format comes from wanting a module format that was better than today's "write a bunch of script tags with implicit dependencies that you have to manually order"
I don't quite understand why this methodology is so bad. The difficult part is that you have to manually order dependencies. But the benefit is that you don't have an additional layer of abstraction.