As configured in my dotfiles.
start new:
tmux
start new with session name:
from django.db.models.signals import post_init | |
def track_data(*fields): | |
""" | |
Tracks property changes on a model instance. | |
The changed list of properties is refreshed on model initialization | |
and save. | |
>>> @track_data('name') |
As configured in my dotfiles.
start new:
tmux
start new with session name:
var parser = document.createElement('a'); | |
parser.href = "http://example.com:3000/pathname/?search=test#hash"; | |
parser.protocol; // => "http:" | |
parser.hostname; // => "example.com" | |
parser.port; // => "3000" | |
parser.pathname; // => "/pathname/" | |
parser.search; // => "?search=test" | |
parser.hash; // => "#hash" | |
parser.host; // => "example.com:3000" |
When the directory structure of your Node.js application (not library!) has some depth, you end up with a lot of annoying relative paths in your require calls like:
const Article = require('../../../../app/models/article');
Those suck for maintenance and they're ugly.
Simply put, destructuring in Clojure is a way extract values from a datastructure and bind them to symbols, without having to explicitly traverse the datstructure. It allows for elegant and concise Clojure code.