Optional - Set format on save and any global prettier options
npm i -D eslint prettier eslint-plugin-prettier eslint-config-prettier eslint-plugin-node eslint-config-node
using System; | |
using System.Collections.Generic; | |
using System.ComponentModel.DataAnnotations; | |
namespace Utilities | |
{ | |
// Credit http://www.technofattie.com/2011/10/05/recursive-validation-using-dataannotations.html | |
// Usage | |
// |
############################################################################# | |
# Full Imports | |
from __future__ import division | |
import math | |
import random | |
""" | |
This is a pure Python implementation of the K-means Clustering algorithmn. The | |
original can be found here: |
This means, on your local machine, you haven't made any SSH keys. Not to worry. Here's how to fix:
*nix
based command prompt (but not the default Windows Command Prompt!)cd ~/.ssh
. This will take you to the root directory for Git (Likely C:\Users\[YOUR-USER-NAME]\.ssh\
on Windows).ssh
folder, there should be these two files: id_rsa
and id_rsa.pub
. These are the files that tell your computer how to communicate with GitHub, BitBucket, or any other Git based service. Type ls
to see a directory listing. If those two files don't show up, proceed to the next step. NOTE: Your SSH keys must be named id_rsa
and id_rsa.pub
in order for Git, GitHub, and BitBucket to recognize them by default.ssh-keygen -t rsa -C "your_email@example.com"
. Th[ | |
{name: 'Afghanistan', code: 'AF'}, | |
{name: 'Åland Islands', code: 'AX'}, | |
{name: 'Albania', code: 'AL'}, | |
{name: 'Algeria', code: 'DZ'}, | |
{name: 'American Samoa', code: 'AS'}, | |
{name: 'AndorrA', code: 'AD'}, | |
{name: 'Angola', code: 'AO'}, | |
{name: 'Anguilla', code: 'AI'}, | |
{name: 'Antarctica', code: 'AQ'}, |