| ##-------------------------- | |
| ## Terraform: Functions ## | |
| ##-------------------------- | |
| ## Open terraform console | |
| terraform console | |
| ####################### | |
| ## Numeric Functions ## | |
| ####################### |
I keep fixing this up, but if it fails for you, check if these are better maintained https://tip.golang.org/cmd/go/#hdr-Configuration_for_downloading_non_public_code and https://golang.org/ref/mod#private-modules.
Cloning the repo using one of the below techniques should work correctly but you may still be getting an unrecognized import error.
As it stands for Go v1.13, I found in the doc that we should use the GOPRIVATE variable like so:
GOPRIVATE=github.com/ORGANISATION_OR_USER_NAME go get -u -f github.com/ORGANISATION_OR_USER_NAME/REPO_NAME
The 'go env -w' command (see 'go help env') can be used to set these variables for future go command invocations.
| {"lastUpload":"2020-03-31T11:31:46.511Z","extensionVersion":"v3.4.3"} |
Ctrl + Alt + Space
| /* | |
| This snippet is esssentially the same as being in the Twitter longer tweets test, for tweetdeck. | |
| The Tweet length counter is fixed by tricking TweetDeck into counting up to 140 characters, twice, so you'll see 140 | |
| instead of 280 in the counter but going over 140 will give you another set of 140 charactrs. | |
| */ | |
| TD.services.TwitterClient.prototype.makeTwitterCall=function(b,e,f,g,c,d,h){c=c||function(){};d=d||function(){};b=this.request(b,{method:f,params:Object.assign(e,{weighted_character_count:!0}),processor:g,feedType:h});return b.addCallbacks(function(a){c(a.data)},function(a){d(a.req,"",a.msg,a.req.errors)}),b}; | |
| twttrTxt=Object.assign({},twttr.txt,{isInvalidTweet:function(){return!1},getTweetLength:function(x){return x=twttr.txt.getTweetLength.apply(this,arguments),x<140||x/140>2?x:x%140}}); |
| package main | |
| import ( | |
| "crypto/aes" | |
| "crypto/cipher" | |
| "crypto/rand" | |
| "crypto/sha256" | |
| "encoding/hex" | |
| "fmt" | |
| "strings" |
As of January 2018, Raspbian does not yet include the latest Python release, Python 3.6. This means we will have to build it ourselves, and here is how to do it. There is also an ansible role attached that automates it all for you.
- Install the required build-tools (some might already be installed on your system).
