Tutorial by Examples: l

The and-operator (&&) and the or-operator (||) employ short-circuiting to prevent unnecessary work if the outcome of the operation does not change with the extra work. In x && y, y will not be evaluated if x evaluates to false, because the whole expression is guaranteed to be false....
Introduction Package is a term used by npm to denote tools that developers can use for their projects. This includes everything from libraries and frameworks such as jQuery and AngularJS to task runners such as Gulp.js. The packages will come in a folder typically called node_modules, which will a...
Dates don't exist in isolation. It is common that you will need to find the amount of time between dates or determine what the date will be tomorrow. This can be accomplished using timedelta objects import datetime today = datetime.date.today() print('Today:', today) yesterday = today - date...
println("Hello, World!") To run Julia, first get the interpreter from the website’s download page. The current stable release is v0.5.0, and this version is recommended for most users. Certain package developers or power users may choose to use the nightly build, which is far less stabl...
The $_SESSION variable is an array, and you can retrieve or manipulate it like a normal array. <?php // Starting the session session_start(); // Storing the value in session $_SESSION['id'] = 342; // conditional usage of session values that may have been set in a previous session if(!i...
C++11 The type std::tuple can bundle any number of values, potentially including values of different types, into a single return object: std::tuple<int, int, int, int> foo(int a, int b) { // or auto (C++14) return std::make_tuple(a + b, a - b, a * b, a / b); } In C++17, a braced init...
Use std::string::substr to split a string. There are two variants of this member function. The first takes a starting position from which the returned substring should begin. The starting position must be valid in the range (0, str.length()]: std::string str = "Hello foo, bar and world!"...
Replace by position To replace a portion of a std::string you can use the method replace from std::string. replace has a lot of useful overloads: //Define string std::string str = "Hello foo, bar and world!"; std::string alternate = "Hello foobar"; //1) str.replace(6, 3,...
var fs = require('fs'); // Save the string "Hello world!" in a file called "hello.txt" in // the directory "/tmp" using the default encoding (utf8). // This operation will be completed in background and the callback // will be called when it is either done or fail...
Use the filesystem module for all file operations: const fs = require('fs'); With Encoding In this example, read hello.txt from the directory /tmp. This operation will be completed in the background and the callback occurs on completion or failure: fs.readFile('/tmp/hello.txt', { encoding: '...
const fs = require('fs'); // Read the contents of the directory /usr/local/bin asynchronously. // The callback will be invoked once the operation has either completed // or failed. fs.readdir('/usr/local/bin', (err, files) => { // On error, show it and return if(err) return console.er...
Use Case CASE can be used in conjunction with SUM to return a count of only those items matching a pre-defined condition. (This is similar to COUNTIF in Excel.) The trick is to return binary results indicating matches, so the "1"s returned for matching entries can be summed for a count o...
in myapp/context_processors.py: from django.conf import settings def debug(request): return {'DEBUG': settings.DEBUG} in settings.py: TEMPLATES = [ { ... 'OPTIONS': { 'context_processors': [ ... 'myapp.context_processor...
project/jni/main.c #include <stdio.h> #include <unistd.h> int main(void) { printf("Hello world!\n"); return 0; } project/jni/Android.mk LOCAL_PATH := $(call my-dir) include $(CLEAR_VARS) LOCAL_MODULE := hello_world LOCAL_SRC_FILES := main.c include $(BU...
In addition to named imports, you can provide a default export. // circle.js export const PI = 3.14; export default function area(radius) { return PI * radius * radius; } You can use a simplified syntax to import the default export. import circleArea from './circle'; console.log(circle...
In ECMAScript 6, when using the module syntax (import/export), each file becomes its own module with a private namespace. Top-level functions and variables do not pollute the global namespace. To expose functions, classes, and variables for other modules to import, you can use the export keyword. /...
Given that the module from the Defining a Module section exists in the file test.js, you can import from that module and use its exported members: import {doSomething, MyClass, PI} from './test' doSomething() const mine = new MyClass() mine.test() console.log(PI) The somethingPrivate()...
Opening a file is done in the same way for all 3 file streams (ifstream, ofstream, and fstream). You can open the file directly in the constructor: std::ifstream ifs("foo.txt"); // ifstream: Opens file "foo.txt" for reading only. std::ofstream ofs("foo.txt"); // ...
There are several ways to read data from a file. If you know how the data is formatted, you can use the stream extraction operator (>>). Let's assume you have a file named foo.txt which contains the following data: John Doe 25 4 6 1987 Jane Doe 15 5 24 1976 Then you can use the following...
There are several ways to write to a file. The easiest way is to use an output file stream (ofstream) together with the stream insertion operator (<<): std::ofstream os("foo.txt"); if(os.is_open()){ os << "Hello World!"; } Instead of <<, you can also ...

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