- Create your realm / client
- Inside client configuration go to "Mappers"
- Click on "Create"
- Name it "hasura"
- Choose Mapper Type "Script Mapper"
- Add following script to demonstrate how it works
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/** | |
* Copyright 2019 Google LLC. | |
* SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0 | |
*/ | |
function getEnvironment() { | |
var environment = { | |
spreadsheetID: "<REPLACE WITH YOUR SPREADSHEET ID>", | |
firebaseUrl: "<REPLACE WITH YOUR REALTIME DB URL>" | |
}; |
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# Starship command prompt configuration file. Colour choice and over-use of emoji | |
# is to help blend in with Ubuntu MATE default theme, Ambiant-Mate. | |
# disable starship from forcing a new line to be taken. Solved the empty line | |
# at start of terminal | |
add_newline = false | |
[line_break] | |
disabled = true |
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/* | |
Copy this into the console of any web page that is interactive and doesn't | |
do hard reloads. You will hear your DOM changes as different pitches of | |
audio. | |
I have found this interesting for debugging, but also fun to hear web pages | |
render like UIs do in movies. | |
*/ | |
const audioCtx = new (window.AudioContext || window.webkitAudioContext)() |
I was poking around trying to figure out all the packages I have access to publish and got curious. So I write this little script to determine the download stats for all the packages I have publish access to.
Feel free to try it yourself. Just change the username passed to getUserDownloadStats
.
By default, the stats are sorted by their average daily downloads (descending). That should give you an idea of the most "popular" package of a given user relative to how long that package has been around.
You can use it with npx
like so:
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convert("one hundred five"); // "105" | |
convert("six hundred and fifty three"); // "653" | |
convert("zero zero one two three"); // "123" | |
convert("twelve o three"); // "1203" | |
convert("thirteen zero nine"); // "1309" | |
convert("fifteen sixteen"); // "1516" | |
convert("fourteen ninety two"); // "1492" | |
convert("nineteen ten"); // "1910" | |
convert("twelve hundred"); // "1200" | |
convert("twenty three hundred"); // "2300" |
The package that linked you here is now pure ESM. It cannot be require()
'd from CommonJS.
This means you have the following choices:
- Use ESM yourself. (preferred)
Useimport foo from 'foo'
instead ofconst foo = require('foo')
to import the package. You also need to put"type": "module"
in your package.json and more. Follow the below guide. - If the package is used in an async context, you could use
await import(…)
from CommonJS instead ofrequire(…)
. - Stay on the existing version of the package until you can move to ESM.
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