Tutorial by Examples: e

Getters and setters allow you to define custom behaviour for reading and writing a given property on your class. To the user, they appear the same as any typical property. However, internally a custom function you provide is used to determine the value when the property is accessed (the getter), and...
If it's not already done in php.ini, error reporting can be set dynamically and should be set to allow most errors to be shown: Syntax int error_reporting ([ int $level ] ) Examples // should always be used prior to 5.4 error_reporting(E_ALL); // -1 will show every possible error, even whe...
try/catch try..catch blocks can be used to control the flow of a program where Exceptions may be thrown. They can be caught and handled gracefully rather than letting PHP stop when one is encountered: try { // Do a bunch of things... throw new Exception('My test exception!'); } catch (E...
Usually, you have to use git add or git rm to add changes to the index before you can git commit them. Pass the -a or --all option to automatically add every change (to tracked files) to the index, including removals: git commit -a If you would like to also add a commit message you would do: g...
A singleton is a pattern that restricts the instantiation of a class to one instance/object. For more info on python singleton design patterns, see here. class SingletonType(type): def __call__(cls, *args, **kwargs): try: return cls.__instance except AttributeErr...
Perl tries to do what you mean: print "Hello World\n"; The two tricky bits are the semicolon at the end of the line and the \n, which adds a newline (line feed). If you have a relatively new version of perl, you can use say instead of print to have the carriage return added automatical...
An unordered list can be created with the <ul> tag and each list item can be created with the <li> tag as shown by the example below: <ul> <li>Item</li> <li>Another Item</li> <li>Yet Another Item</li> </ul> This will produce a...
An ordered list can be created with the <ol> tag and each list item can be created with the <li> tag as in the example below: <ol> <li>Item</li> <li>Another Item</li> <li>Yet Another Item</li> </ol> This will produce a numbere...
One common pitfall when using dictionaries is to access a non-existent key. This typically results in a KeyError exception mydict = {} mydict['not there'] Traceback (most recent call last): File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module> KeyError: 'not there' One way to avoid...
Right after you install Git, the first thing you should do is set your username and email address. From a shell, type: git config --global user.name "Mr. Bean" git config --global user.email [email protected] git config is the command to get or set options --global means that the ...
To see the log in a prettier graph-like structure use: git log --decorate --oneline --graph sample output : * e0c1cea (HEAD -> maint, tag: v2.9.3, origin/maint) Git 2.9.3 * 9b601ea Merge branch 'jk/difftool-in-subdir' into maint |\ | * 32b8c58 difftool: use Git::* functions instead of...
$ tail -f /var/log/syslog > log.txt [1]+ Stopped tail -f /var/log/syslog > log.txt $ sleep 10 & $ jobs [1]+ Stopped tail -f /var/log/syslog > log.txt [2]- Running sleep 10 &
The function rand() can be used to generate a pseudo-random integer value between 0 and RAND_MAX (0 and RAND_MAX included). srand(int) is used to seed the pseudo-random number generator. Each time rand() is seeded wih the same seed, it must produce the same sequence of values. It should only be see...
Here's a standalone random number generator that doesn't rely on rand() or similar library functions. Why would you want such a thing? Maybe you don't trust your platform's builtin random number generator, or maybe you want a reproducible source of randomness independent of any particular library ...
> redirect the standard output (aka STDOUT) of the current command into a file or another descriptor. These examples write the output of the ls command into the file file.txt ls >file.txt > file.txt ls The target file is created if it doesn't exists, otherwise this file is truncated. ...
< reads from its right argument and writes to its left argument. To write a file into STDIN we should read /tmp/a_file and write into STDIN i.e 0</tmp/a_file Note: Internal file descriptor defaults to 0 (STDIN) for < $ echo "b" > /tmp/list.txt $ echo "a" >> ...
File descriptors like 0 and 1 are pointers. We change what file descriptors point to with redirection. >/dev/null means 1 points to /dev/null. First we point 1 (STDOUT) to /dev/null then point 2 (STDERR) to whatever 1 points to. # STDERR is redirect to STDOUT: redirected to /dev/null, # effect...
2 is STDERR. $ echo_to_stderr 2>/dev/null # echos nothing Definitions: echo_to_stderr is a command that writes "stderr" to STDERR echo_to_stderr () { echo stderr >&2 } $ echo_to_stderr stderr
Truncate > Create specified file if it does not exist. Truncate (remove file's content) Write to file $ echo "first line" > /tmp/lines $ echo "second line" > /tmp/lines $ cat /tmp/lines second line Append >> Create specified file if it does not e...
Defines an <initially-hidden> custom element which hides its contents until a specified number of seconds have elapsed. const InitiallyHiddenElement = document.registerElement('initially-hidden', class extends HTMLElement { createdCallback() { this.revealTimeoutId = null; } at...

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