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ronbeltran / heroku-remote.md
Created October 20, 2020 14:00 — forked from randallreedjr/heroku-remote.md
Add a Heroku remote to an existing git repo

Working with git remotes on Heroku

Generally, you will add a git remote for your Heroku app during the Heroku app creation process, i.e. heroku create. However, if you are working on an existing app and want to add git remotes to enable manual deploys, the following commands may be useful.

Adding a new remote

Add a remote for your Staging app and deploy

Note that on Heroku, you must always use master as the destination branch on the remote. If you want to deploy a different branch, you can use the syntax local_branch:destination_branch seen below (in this example, we push the local staging branch to the master branch on heroku.

$ git remote add staging https://git.heroku.com/staging-app.git
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ronbeltran / postgres-brew.md
Created February 26, 2021 05:33 — forked from ibraheem4/postgres-brew.md
Installing Postgres via Brew (OSX)

Installing Postgres via Brew

Pre-Reqs

Brew Package Manager

In your command-line run the following commands:

  1. brew doctor
  2. brew update
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ronbeltran / vim_crash_course.md
Created August 3, 2022 14:42 — forked from dmsul/vim_crash_course.md
Vim Crash Course

NOTE: Specific examples given for options, flags, commands variations, etc., are not comprehensive.

NORMAL MODE

Vim has 2 main "modes", that chance the behavior of all your keys. The default mode of Vim is Normal Mode and is mostly used for moving the cursor and navigating the current file.

Some important (or longer) commands begin with ":" and you will see the text you enter next at the bottom left of the screen.

:q[uit] - quit (the current window of) Vim. ("Window" here is internal to Vim, not if you have multiple OS-level windows of Vim open at once.)
:q! - force quit (if the current buffer has been changed since the last save)
:e[dit] {filename} - read file {filename} into a new buffer.