Tutorial by Examples: e

You should implement SFSafariViewControllerDelegate so that your class is notified when the user hits the Done button on the SafariViewController and you can dismiss it as well. First declare your class to implement the protocol. class MyClass: SFSafariViewControllerDelegate { } Implement th...
You can add items to a user's Reading List in Safari by calling the addItem method on the SSReadingList singleton. let readingList = SSReadingList.default() readingList?.addItem(with: yourURL, title: "optional title", previewText: "optional preview text") The default Reading...
Don't forget to import the necessary framework first. import SafariServices //Objective-C @import SafariServices; Instantiate a SafariViewController instance. let safariVC = SFSafariViewController(URL: URL(string: "your_url")!) //Objective-C @import SafariServices; NSURL *URL = [...
The function map() from the package maps provides a simple starting point for creating maps with R. A basic world map can be drawn as follows: require(maps) map() The color of the outline can be changed by setting the color parameter, col, to either the character name or hex value of a color...
Considering the following dictionary: d = {"a": 1, "b": 2, "c": 3} To iterate through its keys, you can use: for key in d: print(key) Output: "a" "b" "c" This is equivalent to: for key in d.keys(): print(key) ...
Run the command below in a shell after installing Ruby. This shows how you can execute simple Ruby programs without creating a Ruby file: ruby -e 'puts "Hello World"' You can also feed a Ruby program to the interpreter's standard input. One way to do that is to use a here document in...
if /hay/ =~ 'haystack' puts "There is hay in the word haystack" end Note: The order is significant. Though 'haystack' =~ /hay/ is in most cases an equivalent, side effects might differ: Strings captured from named capture groups are assigned to local variables only when Regexp#=~...
This is the code for a simple console project, that prints "Hello, World!" to STDOUT, and exits with an exit code of 0 [<EntryPoint>] let main argv = printfn "Hello, World!" 0 Example breakdown Line-by-line: [<EntryPoint>] - A .net Attribute that m...
Say you have a library website, and you want to have a custom post type named Books. It can be registered as function create_bookposttype() { $args = array( 'public' => true, 'labels' => array( 'name' => __( 'Books' ), 'singular_name' => ...
There are 16 fundamental data types, or classes, in MATLAB. Each of these classes is in the form of a matrix or array. With the exception of function handles, this matrix or array is a minimum of 0-by-0 in size and can grow to an n-dimensional array of any size. A function handle is always scalar (1...
Slices are objects in themselves and can be stored in variables with the built-in slice() function. Slice variables can be used to make your code more readable and to promote reuse. >>> programmer_1 = [ 1956, 'Guido', 'van Rossum', 'Python', 'Netherlands'] >>> programmer_2 = [ 18...
A factory decreases coupling between code that needs to create objects from object creation code. Object creation is not made explicitly by calling a class constructor but by calling some function that creates the object on behalf the caller. A simple Java example is the following one: interface Ca...
Imports System.IO Dim filename As String = "c:\path\to\file.txt" File.WriteAllText(filename, "Text to write" & vbCrLf)
Dim filename As String = "c:\path\to\file.txt" If System.IO.File.Exists(filename) Then Dim writer As New System.IO.StreamWriter(filename) writer.Write("Text to write" & vbCrLf) 'Add a newline writer.close() End If
using System.Text; using System.IO; string filename = "c:\path\to\file.txt"; //'using' structure allows for proper disposal of stream. using (StreamWriter writer = new StreamWriter(filename")) { writer.WriteLine("Text to Write\n"); }
using System.IO; using System.Text; string filename = "c:\path\to\file.txt"; File.writeAllText(filename, "Text to write\n");
The following program says hello to the user. It takes one positional argument, the name of the user, and can also be told the greeting. import argparse parser = argparse.ArgumentParser() parser.add_argument('name', help='name of user' ) parser.add_argument('-g', '--greeting', ...
Use os.path.abspath: >>> os.getcwd() '/Users/csaftoiu/tmp' >>> os.path.abspath('foo') '/Users/csaftoiu/tmp/foo' >>> os.path.abspath('../foo') '/Users/csaftoiu/foo' >>> os.path.abspath('/foo') '/foo'
To split one component off of the path: >>> p = os.path.join(os.getcwd(), 'foo.txt') >>> p '/Users/csaftoiu/tmp/foo.txt' >>> os.path.dirname(p) '/Users/csaftoiu/tmp' >>> os.path.basename(p) 'foo.txt' >>> os.path.split(os.getcwd()) ('/Users/csafto...
docopt turns command-line argument parsing on its head. Instead of parsing the arguments, you just write the usage string for your program, and docopt parses the usage string and uses it to extract the command line arguments. """ Usage: script_name.py [-a] [-b] <path> ...

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