- Search for related terms according to your design needs on dribble.
- Download all images which are relevant to your websites.
- Go to Figma and import all those images.
- Use segment out all things plugin to cut out everything as a separate asset.
- Choose which you require and add into your assets library.
- Now use those assets on your website.
- Decide a color pallete(ask AI to decide for you according to your website subject matter)
- Adapting design around one single theme is what you are supposed to do as a human.
{"name":"Solidity","settings":"{\"settings\":\"{\\r\\n \\\"workbench.startupEditor\\\": \\\"welcomePage\\\",\\r\\n \\\"workbench.colorTheme\\\": \\\"Solarized Light\\\",\\r\\n \\\"workbench.editorAssociations\\\": [\\r\\n {\\r\\n \\\"viewType\\\": \\\"jupyter.notebook.ipynb\\\",\\r\\n \\\"filenamePattern\\\": \\\"*.ipynb\\\"\\r\\n }\\r\\n ],\\r\\n\\t\\\"editor.inlineSuggest.enabled\\\": true,\\r\\n \\\"files.autoSave\\\": \\\"onFocusChange\\\",\\r\\n \\\"editor.wordWrap\\\": \\\"on\\\",\\r\\n \\\"solidity.telemetry\\\": false\\r\\n}\"}","extensions":"[{\"identifier\":{\"id\":\"github.copilot\",\"uuid\":\"23c4aeee-f844-43cd-b53e-1113e483f1a6\"},\"displayName\":\"GitHub Copilot\"},{\"identifier\":{\"id\":\"jebbs.plantuml\",\"uuid\":\"d95cb424-7a5a-4e08-9698-107d6fd590cf\"},\"displayName\":\"PlantUML\"},{\"identifier\":{\"id\":\"juanblanco.solidity\",\"uuid\":\"25baab03-fe9a-40c7-b683-55c9a0a92480\"}},{\"identifier\":{\"id\":\"nomicfoundation.hardhat-solid |
For first time setup:- | |
gcloud auth login - To login into your google account | |
gcloud config set project PROJECT_ID | |
gcloud cloud-shell ssh --authorize-session |
- If you have HDD, there gonna be a drastic difference in boot time.
$ systemd-analyze
Startup finished in 4.026s (kernel) + 47.655s (userspace) = 51.681s
graphical.target reached after 47.654s in userspace.
47 seconds might sound painful but that was around 2 minutes and 5-15 seconds in ubuntu and 10 minutes in Windows :)
- For some reason, bluetooth never worked for me on ubuntu
git rebase -i HEAD~2 #assumed last two commits need to be squashed
Similarly HEAD~3 for squashing last three and so on
As a result vi
or your any other text editor opens up top two lines(because we are squashing two commits) will be
pick [commit-sha] [commit-message]
pick [commit-sha] [commit-message]
There will be more lines below them but all would be commented
//SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT | |
pragma solidity 0.8.7; | |
contract HelloWorld { | |
// Declaring a global variable that stores the number | |
uint myNumber; | |
/** @dev Store a given number into a variable |
// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-3.0 | |
pragma solidity >=0.7.0 <0.9.0; | |
/** | |
* @title Ballot | |
* @dev Implements voting process along with vote delegation | |
*/ | |
contract Ballot { | |
One simple thing will be to before creating changes to file for next commit in separate pull request, checkout
new branch tracking upstream repository branch against which you want to create your pull request.
But let say you have alreay committed the changes into the branch which might have already unaprroved pull requests.
In thaaat case you have to do it little bit new way actually you have to cherry-pick
the commit and put on a new branch. Then pull request against that other repository will be automatically creating new pull request against same original branch of that repository.
So how do we do that?
first you will need commit hash of that commit which you want to put on top of new branch.
To get commit hash of that particular commmit do git log
in the branch where you commited the required changes.
There you will see the hash, commit message, timings and other info which will help you identify the required commit.
After copying that hash(long ascii string - sha1) you can quit using q
Yes!
You need a browser extension
@everyone
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/ (AMO)
Search '@everyone' there in the search bar or directly go to this link https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/tageveryone/