I have a script I run to deploy two web services and a front-end application. The script calls a method that checks to see if the two back-end services are up and running. If so, deem the deploy successful, otherwise revert. The two services sometimes take longer than the front-end to start up. Currently, I put in a sleep call to delay the web service check. This allows them time to start up. I wa
In my app I use instagram implicit authentification, which implies to login user in webview and get token from redirect url. I use flutter_webview_plugin Next code builds WebviewScaffold with login url. And it listen for url changes. So when response is redirected to my redirectUrl it parses url to get token. Then you need to save token for following requests in app. import 'dart:async'; import 'p
Cross-origin resource sharing is a mechanism that allows a web page to make XMLHttpRequests to another domain (from Wikipedia). I've been fiddling with CORS for the last couple of days and I think I have a pretty good understanding of how everything works. So my question is not about how CORS / preflight work, it's about the reason behind coming up with preflights as a new request type. I fail to
When I'm viewing the downloaded resources for a page in the Chrome web inspector, I also see the HTML/JS/CSS requested by certain extensions. In the example above, indicator.html, indicator.js and indicator.css are actually part of the Readability Chrome extension, not part of my app. This isn't too big a deal in this particular situation, but on a more complex page and with several extensions ins
I downloaded Java 7u17 on Mac OS 10.7.5 from here and successfully installed it. To do some JNI programming, I need to know where Java is installed on my Mac. I thought that inside the /Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/ folder, there would be a folder called 1.7.0.jdk or something, but then I found the folder empty. This was confirmed by running ls /Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/ in the Termina
I want to get a list of all the branches in a Git repository with the "freshest" branches at the top, where the "freshest" branch is the one that's been committed to most recently (and is, therefore, more likely to be one I want to pay attention to). Is there a way I can use Git to either (a) sort the list of branches by latest commit, or (b) get a list of branches together with each one's last-co
I have a script that detects Javascript errors on my website and sends them to my backend for reporting. It reports the first error encountered, the supposed line number, and the time. EDIT to include doctype: <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd"> <html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en" x
How do I get rid of submodules when switching branches. I do not understand why git clean says it removed the submodule but does not. Is this a bug? Below are cut&paste steps to reproduce. git --version git version 1.7.8.4 git init submod cd submod echo "This is a submodule" > README.txt git add . git commit -m "Initial commit" cd .. git init prog cd prog echo "This is a program" > README.txt git
Is there a way in Git to have a 'description' for branches? While I try to use descriptive names, working for a while on a single branch sometimes dampens my memory of why I made some of the other topic branches. I try to use descriptive names for the branches, but I think a 'description' (short note about the purpose of the branch) would be nice.
You can't parse [X]HTML with regex. Because HTML can't be parsed by regex. Regex is not a tool that can be used to correctly parse HTML. As I have answered in HTML-and-regex questions here so many times before, the use of regex will not allow you to consume HTML. Regular expressions are a tool that is insufficiently sophisticated to understand the constructs employed by HTML. HTML is not a regular
リリース、障害情報などのサービスのお知らせ
最新の人気エントリーの配信
処理を実行中です
j次のブックマーク
k前のブックマーク
lあとで読む
eコメント一覧を開く
oページを開く