Tutorial by Examples: e

The first thing we need to do it add EventBus to our module's gradle file: dependencies { ... compile 'org.greenrobot:eventbus:3.0.0' ... } Now we need to create a model for our event. It can contain anything we want to pass along. For now we'll just make an empty class. public ...
You will have to inject $filter: angular .module('filters', []) .filter('percentage', function($filter) { return function (input) { return $filter('number')(input * 100) + ' %'; }; });
By default, a filter has a single parameter: the variable it is applied on. But you can pass more parameter to the function: angular .module('app', []) .controller('MyController', function($scope) { $scope.example = 0.098152; }) .filter('percentage', function($filter) { return...
ng-include allows you to delegate the control of one part of the page to a specific controller. You may want to do this because the complexity of that component is becoming such that you want to encapsulate all the logic in a dedicated controller. An example is: <div ng-include src=&q...
def foo(li=[]): li.append(1) print(li) foo([2]) # Out: [2, 1] foo([3]) # Out: [3, 1] This code behaves as expected, but what if we don't pass an argument? foo() # Out: [1] As expected... foo() # Out: [1, 1] Not as expected... This is because default arguments of function...
Consider the case of creating a nested list structure by multiplying: li = [[]] * 3 print(li) # Out: [[], [], []] At first glance we would think we have a list of containing 3 different nested lists. Let's try to append 1 to the first one: li[0].append(1) print(li) # Out: [[1], [1], [1]] ...
iex> [1, 2, 3] -- [1, 3] [2] -- removes the first occurrence of an item on the left list for each item on the right.
Use in operator to check if an element is a member of a list. iex> 2 in [1, 2, 3] true iex> "bob" in [1, 2, 3] false
{ "name": "your/package", "license": "proprietary", "type": "project", "description": "How to load an external private Composer package.", ... "require": { "your/priv...
Looping via recursion is also possible in Kotlin as in most programming languages. fun factorial(n: Long): Long = if (n == 0) 1 else n * factorial(n - 1) println(factorial(10)) // 3628800 In the example above, the factorial function will be called repeatedly by itself until the given conditio...
The Kotlin Standard Library also provides numerous useful functions to iteratively work upon collections. For example, the map function can be used to transform a list of items. val numbers = listOf(1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 0) val numberStrings = numbers.map { "Number $it" } One of...
Use Conditionals via (syntax is in [brackets]): when [when:] Task: - name: run if operating system is debian command: echo "I am a Debian Computer" when: ansible_os_family == "Debian" loops [with_items:] loops [with_dicts:] Custom Facts [ wh...
Common use when: ansible_os_family == "CentOS" when: ansible_os_family == "Redhat" when: ansible_os_family == "Darwin" when: ansible_os_family == "Debian" when: ansible_os_family == "Windows" All Lists based on discuss here http://comments...
Basic Usage Use the when condition to control whether a task or role runs or is skipped. This is normally used to change play behavior based on facts from the destination system. Consider this playbook: - hosts: all tasks: - include: Ubuntu.yml when: ansible_os_family == "Ubunt...
- name: copy ssl key/cert/ssl_include files copy: src=files/ssl/{{ item }} dest=/etc/apache2/ssl/ with_items: - g_chain.crt - server.crt - server.key - ssl_vhost.inc
Ordering the results and setting a limit can easily be achieved with 2 additional lines added to the chain, like so: $db = JFactory::getDbo(); $query = $db->getQuery(true); $query->select('*') ->from('#__users') ->where('username = '. $db->q('John')) ->ord...
A simple query that selects all users from the #__users table with a username that matches John $db = JFactory::getDbo(); $query = $db->getQuery(true); $query->select('*'); $query->from('#__users'); $query->where('username = '. $db->q('John')); $db->setQuery($query); ...
Directives can be used to build reusable components. Here is an example of a "user box" component: userBox.js angular.module('simpleDirective', []).directive('userBox', function() { return { scope: { username: '=username', reputation: '=reputation' }, ...
The angular.isObject return true if and only if the argument passed to it is an object, this function will also return true for an Array and will return false for null even though typeof null is object . angular.isObject(value) This function is useful for type checking when you need a defined ...
The angular.isElement returns true if the argument passed to it is a DOM Element or a jQuery wrapped Element. angular.isElement(elem) This function is useful to type check if a passed argument is an element before being processed as such. Examples: angular.isElement(document.querySelector(&q...

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