Paprika doesn't have their API documented, so this is me reverse-engineering it from an Android device
import requests | |
import base64 | |
from tqdm import tqdm | |
master_json_url = 'https://178skyfiregce-a.akamaihd.net/exp=1474107106~acl=%2F142089577%2F%2A~hmac=0d9becc441fc5385462d53bf59cf019c0184690862f49b414e9a2f1c5bafbe0d/142089577/video/426274424,426274425,426274423,426274422/master.json?base64_init=1' | |
base_url = master_json_url[:master_json_url.rfind('/', 0, -26) + 1] | |
resp = requests.get(master_json_url) | |
content = resp.json() |
This is a working example on how to store CryptoKey
s locally in your browser. We are able to save the objects, without serializing them. This means we can keep them not exportable (which might be more secure?? not sure what attack vectors this prevents).
To try out this example, first make sure you are in a browser that has support for async...await
and indexedDB (latest chrome canary with chrome://flags
"Enable Experimental Javascript" works). Load some page and copy and paste this code into the console. Then call encryptDataSaveKey()
. This will create a private/public key pair and encrypted some random data with the private key. Then save both of them. Now reload the page, copy in the code, and run loadKeyDecryptData()
. It will load the keys and encrypted data and decrypt it. You should see the same data logged both times.
Based on Abdelrahman Omran PWA presentation, and Google PWA Codelab
- View: Also called a "template", a file that contains markup (like HTML) and optionally additional instructions on how to generate snippets of HTML, such as text interpolation, loops, conditionals, includes, and so on.
- View engine: Also called a "template library" or "templater", ie. a library that implements view functionality, and potentially also a custom language for specifying it (like Pug does).
- HTML templater: A template library that's designed specifically for generating HTML. It understands document structure and thus can provide useful advanced tools like mixins, as well as more secure output escaping (since it can determine the right escaping approach from the context in which a value is used), but it also means that the templater is not useful for anything other than HTML.
- String-based templater: A template library that implements templating logic, but that has no understanding of the content it is generating - it simply concatenates together strings, potenti
// check version | |
node -v || node --version | |
// list locally installed versions of node | |
nvm ls | |
// list remove available versions of node | |
nvm ls-remote | |
// install specific version of node |
package main | |
import ( | |
"compress/gzip" | |
"fmt" | |
"io/ioutil" | |
"net/http" | |
"time" | |
"encoding/json" |
#!/bin/bash | |
# run_ios_sim builds and runs an iOS app on the simulator | |
# | |
# It is designed to replicate the behavior of "Run" in Xcode and assumes basic | |
# xcodebuild usage. | |
# | |
# USAGE: | |
# export IOS_SIM_UDID=342F9A20-DF48-41A9-BE60-C6B35F47E97F; \ | |
# export BUNDLE_IDENTIFIER=a.Some; \ | |
# export APP_PATH=$PWD/Build/Debug-iphonesimulator/$APP_NAME.app \ |
[ Update 2025-03-24: Commenting is disabled permanently. Previous comments are archived at web.archive.org. ]
Most of the terminal emulators auto-detect when a URL appears onscreen and allow to conveniently open them (e.g. via Ctrl+click or Cmd+click, or the right click menu).
It was, however, not possible until now for arbitrary text to point to URLs, just as on webpages.