Installer still requires Rosetta, while Native Access and NTKDaemon work on Apple Silicon.
Patch installer package, adding <options hostArchitectures="x86_64,arm64"/> and removing check in installation script.
| from abc import abstractmethod | |
| import copy | |
| from dataclasses import dataclass | |
| from hmac import new | |
| from typing import List, Optional, Iterable | |
| import torch | |
| from torch.distributions.dirichlet import _Dirichlet | |
| from tensordict import TensorDictBase, TensorDict, NestedKey | |
| from tensordict.nn import TensorDictModule, TensorDictSequential |
| deb https://ftp.debian.org/debian/ bookworm contrib main non-free non-free-firmware | |
| # deb-src https://ftp.debian.org/debian/ bookworm contrib main non-free non-free-firmware | |
| deb https://ftp.debian.org/debian/ bookworm-updates contrib main non-free non-free-firmware | |
| # deb-src https://ftp.debian.org/debian/ bookworm-updates contrib main non-free non-free-firmware | |
| deb https://ftp.debian.org/debian/ bookworm-proposed-updates contrib main non-free non-free-firmware | |
| # deb-src https://ftp.debian.org/debian/ bookworm-proposed-updates contrib main non-free non-free-firmware | |
| deb https://ftp.debian.org/debian/ bookworm-backports contrib main non-free non-free-firmware |
This is a proposal for a lightning talk at the Reactive 2016 conference.
NOTE: If you like this, star ⭐ the Gist - the amount of stars decides whether it makes the cut! You could also Retweet if you want :)
JavaScript is a dynamic language, and there's nothing wrong with that. It allows quick iteration and lowers barriers. However, sometimes some compile-time type checking is just what you need to keep your code in line and give yourself the confidence to build bigger and faster. Flow gives the best of both worlds. You can have normal JavaScript but you can also add types where they're helpful, and it adds zero cost at runtime. In this talk I'll show Flow as it applies to a Redux & React codebase.
This is a proposal for a lightning talk at the Reactive 2015 conference.
NOTE: If you like this, star ⭐ the Gist - the amount of stars decides whether it makes the cut! You could also Retweet if you want :)
JavaScript is getting async functions (or already has them if you count Babel.JS) and with them a way to finally slay the evil pyramid. This new language feature lets you write asynchronous code that almost looks synchronous, while maintaining the same semantics as promises. This lets you shed your .then and .catch boilerplate and escape those nested callbacks in favour of clean, explicit, maintainable code.
2015-01-29 Unofficial Relay FAQ
Compilation of questions and answers about Relay from React.js Conf.
Disclaimer: I work on Relay at Facebook. Relay is a complex system on which we're iterating aggressively. I'll do my best here to provide accurate, useful answers, but the details are subject to change. I may also be wrong. Feedback and additional questions are welcome.
Relay is a new framework from Facebook that provides data-fetching functionality for React applications. It was announced at React.js Conf (January 2015).
| from django.conf import settings | |
| from django.utils.translation import string_concat, ugettext_lazy | |
| from django.utils.html import strip_tags | |
| from haystack import indexes, site | |
| from cms.models.managers import PageManager | |
| from cms.models.pagemodel import Page | |
| from cms.models.pluginmodel import CMSPlugin |