Tutorial by Examples: nd

docker run docker/whalesay cowsay 'Hello, StackExchange!' This command tells Docker to create a container from the docker/whalesay image and run the command cowsay 'Hello, StackExchange!' in it. It should print a picture of a whale saying Hello, StackExchange! to your terminal. If the entrypoin...
You can create multiline code snippets by indenting each line with at least four spaces or one tab: #include <stdio.h> int main() { printf("Hello World!\n"); return 0; }
Reflection is often used as part of software testing, such as for the runtime creation/instantiation of mock objects. It's also great for inspecting the state of an object at any given point in time. Here's an example of using Reflection in a unit test to verify a protected class member contains the...
The first two arguments to format are an output stream and a control string. Basic use does not require additional arguments. Passing t as the stream writes to *standard-output*. > (format t "Basic Message") Basic Message nil That expression will write Basic Message to standard ou...
docker run -p "8080:8080" myApp docker run -p "192.168.1.12:80:80" nginx docker run -P myApp In order to use ports on the host have been exposed in an image (via the EXPOSE Dockerfile directive, or --expose command line option for docker run), those ports need to be bound to...
main = do input <- getContents putStr input Input: This is an example sentence. And this one is, too! Output: This is an example sentence. And this one is, too! Note: This program will actually print parts of the output before all of the input has been fully read in. This m...
main = do line <- getLine putStrLn line Input: This is an example. Output: This is an example.
readFloat :: IO Float readFloat = fmap read getLine main :: IO () main = do putStr "Type the first number: " first <- readFloat putStr "Type the second number: " second <- readFloat putStrLn $ show first ++ " + " ++ show se...
Like in several other parts of the I/O library, functions that implicitly use a standard stream have a counterpart in System.IO that performs the same job, but with an extra parameter at the left, of type Handle, that represents the stream being handled. For instance, getLine :: IO String has a cou...
A bit counter-intuitive to the way most other languages' standard I/O libraries do it, Haskell's isEOF does not require you to perform a read operation before checking for an EOF condition; the runtime will do it for you. import System.IO( isEOF ) eofTest :: Int -> IO () eofTest line = do ...
To stop a running container: docker stop <container> [<container>...] This will send the main process in the container a SIGTERM, followed by a SIGKILL if it doesn't stop within the grace period. The name of each container is printed as it stops. To start a container which is stoppe...
We use Notification.requestPermission to ask the user if he/she wants to receive notifications from our website. Notification.requestPermission(function() { if (Notification.permission === 'granted') { // user approved. // use of new Notification(...) syntax will now be succe...
After the user has approved a request for permission to send notifications, we can send a simple notification that says Hello to the user: new Notification('Hello', { body: 'Hello, world!', icon: 'url to an .ico image' }); This will send a notification like this: Hello Hello, world!
5 Treat a property as a combination of two functions, one to get the value from it, and another one to set the value in it. The get property of the property descriptor is a function that will be called to retrieve the value from the property. The set property is also a function, it will be call...
Syntax: SELECT * FROM table_name Using the asterisk operator * serves as a shortcut for selecting all the columns in the table. All rows will also be selected because this SELECT statement does not have a WHERE clause, to specify any filtering criteria. This would also work the same way if you...
To find a character or another string, you can use std::string::find. It returns the position of the first character of the first match. If no matches were found, the function returns std::string::npos std::string str = "Curiosity killed the cat"; auto it = str.find("cat"); ...
The function std::find, defined in the <algorithm> header, can be used to find an element in a std::vector. std::find uses the operator== to compare elements for equality. It returns an iterator to the first element in the range that compares equal to the value. If the element in question is...
At first glance it may appear that null and undefined are basically the same, however there are subtle but important differences. undefined is the absence of a value in the compiler, because where it should be a value, there hasn't been put one, like the case of an unassigned variable. undefined...
1 / 0; // Infinity // Wait! WHAAAT? Infinity is a property of the global object (therefore a global variable) that represents mathematical infinity. It is a reference to Number.POSITIVE_INFINITY It is greater than any other value, and you can get it by dividing by 0 or by evaluating the express...
Many IDEs provide support for generating HTML from Javadocs automatically; some build tools (Maven and Gradle, for example) also have plugins that can handle the HTML creation. However, these tools are not required to generate the Javadoc HTML; this can be done using the command line javadoc tool. ...

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