Tutorial by Examples: u

JSON is a cross language, widely used method to serialize data Supported data types : int, float, boolean, string, list and dict. See -> JSON Wiki for more Here is an example demonstrating the basic usage of JSON :- import json families = (['John'], ['Mark', 'David', {'name': 'Avraham'}]) ...
Here is an example demonstrating the basic usage of pickle:- # Importing pickle try: import cPickle as pickle # Python 2 except ImportError: import pickle # Python 3 # Creating Pythonic object: class Family(object): def __init__(self, names): self.sons = names ...
Identifying your user is only part of security. Once you know who they are, you need a way to control their access to data in your database. Firebase Database Rules allow you to control access for each user. For example, here's a set of security rules that allows anyone to read the path /foo/, but n...
You can save your code snippets for use later simply by drag and drop. For eg: if you have an NSLog statement that used for so many places somewhere else in the project, then you can save the NSLog statements to code snippets library. Drag the NSLog statement to code snippet library. Now you c...
$ mkdir 20{09..11}-{01..12} Entering the ls command will show that the following directories were created: 2009-01 2009-04 2009-07 2009-10 2010-01 2010-04 2010-07 2010-10 2011-01 2011-04 2011-07 2011-10 2009-02 2009-05 2009-08 2009-11 2010-02 2010-05 2010-08 2010-11 2011-02 2011-05 2011-08 2011...
$ cp .vimrc{,.bak} This expands into the command cp .vimrc .vimrc.bak.
Go in the Firebase console. Choose your project Click on the Database section on the left, and then select the Rules tab. If you would like to test your security rules before putting them into production, you can simulate operations in the console using the Simulate button in the upper right ...
The default rules require Authentication. They allow full read and write access to authenticated users of your app. They are useful if you want data open to all users of your app but don't want it open to the world. // These rules require authentication { "rules": { ".read&...
Just define: // These rules give anyone, even people who are not users of your app, // read and write access to your database { "rules": { ".read": true, ".write": true } } It can be useful during development but pay attention because This level o...
Here's an example of a rule that gives each authenticated user a personal node at /users/$user_id where $user_id is the ID of the user obtained through Authentication. // These rules grant access to a node matching the authenticated // user's ID from the Firebase auth token { "rules"...
If you have one of the supported Linux distributions, you can follow the steps on the .NET Core website: https://www.microsoft.com/net If you have an unsupported distribution: Download the .NET Core SDK from the links, picking the distribution closer to the used one. https://www.microsoft.com/net...
First, create a key file, e.g., vault_pass_file, which ideally contains a long sequence of random characters. In linux systems you could use pwgen to create a random password file: pwgen 256 1 > vault_pass_file Then, use this file to encrypt sensitive data, e.g., groups_vars/group.yml: ANSI...
With Vault you can also encrypt non-structured data, such as private key files and still be able to decrypt them in your play with the lookup module. --- - name: Copy private key to destination copy: dest=/home/user/.ssh/id_rsa mode=0600 content=lookup('pipe', 'ANSIBLE_VAULT_PA...
You can run a play which relies on vault-encrypted templates by using the local_action module. --- - name: Decrypt template local_action: "shell {{ view_encrypted_file_cmd }} {{ role_path }}/templates/template.enc > {{ role_path }}/templates/template" changed_when: False - ...
from __future__ import print_function import threading def counter(count): while count > 0: print("Count value", count) count -= 1 return t1 = threading.Thread(target=countdown,args=(10,)) t1.start() t2 = threading.Thread(target=countdown,args=(20,)) ...
Go to the (project folder) Then app -> src -> main. Create folder 'assets -> fonts' into the main folder. Put your 'fontfile.ttf' into the fonts folder.
public void setFont(TextView textView) { textView.setTypeface(myFont); }
Protocol oriented programing can be used as a core Swift design pattern. Different types are able to conform to the same protocol, value types can even conform to multiple protocols and even provide default method implementation. Initially protocols are defined that can represent commonly used pro...
For one-time, non-constant requests for a user's physical activity, use the Snapshot API: // Remember to initialize your client as described in the Remarks section Awareness.SnapshotApi.getDetectedActivity(client) .setResultCallback(new ResultCallback<DetectedActivityResult>() { ...
// Remember to intialize your client as described in the Remarks section Awareness.SnapshotApi.getLocation(client) .setResultCallback(new ResultCallback<LocationResult>() { @Override public void onResult(@NonNull LocationResult locationResult) { Location lo...

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