use std::fmt::Display; | |
use yew::prelude::*; | |
use yew::{function_component, html, Callback, Html, Properties}; | |
#[derive(Properties, PartialEq)] | |
pub struct Props<T: PartialEq + Clone + Display> { | |
pub onselect: Callback<T>, | |
pub items: Vec<T>, | |
} |
{ | |
"name": "Pico-8 Poom", | |
"symbol": "", | |
"description": "It's poom poom!", | |
"seller_fee_basis_points": 500, | |
"image": "https://www.arweave.net/43xtSbpMnBs9svYNT3gGajHD3NctDsTs_pRT9NQvHz4?ext=png", | |
"attributes": [ | |
{ | |
"trait_type": "", | |
"value": "fps" |
Recently I was informed that Blackmagic Design is using AppImage to distribute Fusion for Linux. So I had a look, and what I found is rather surprising. They hide the fact that they are using AppImage (using .run
rather than .AppImage
as an extension), and they do not make use of it advantages because they a) encapsulate it in an archive, making unarchiving necessary, and b) run an installer. So they throw away two advantages of AppImages: a) that they do not need to be unpacked, and b) that they do not need to be installed.
What the heck?!
I am doing this analyis on Ubuntu 16.04.
{ config, pkgs, ... }: | |
{ | |
programs.home-manager.enable = true; | |
home.packages = [ | |
pkgs.htop # performance monitor | |
pkgs.ranger # file manager | |
pkgs.broot # awesome file manager, sorter, finder | |
pkgs.fzf # fuzzy finder |
- rustc-ap-syntax crate docs
- used by rustfmt
- internal tool in rustc
- libsyntax https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/nightly-rustc/syntax/index.html
I hereby claim:
- I am robsaunders on github.
- I am deathdisco (https://keybase.io/deathdisco) on keybase.
- I have a public key ASAws01Bd1bSXUdyMmEo8ARezIBd4uqgegS8hbGYigHQKQo
To claim this, I am signing this object:
- in an upward trending market, bullish TA works and bearish TA fails.
- in a downward trending market, bearish TA works and bullish TA fails.
To determine the trend, use moving averages, channel S/R, and price highs/lows.
A good starter to determine trend is to use the 200ma. You need to see higher highs and higher lows, even on your trade timeframe. For example, if there are higher highs on the 1h and 1d, but on the 1m you're seeing lower highs, don't trade until you do see at least one.
extern crate cocoa; | |
extern crate rtb_rs; | |
use cocoa::base::{selector, nil, NO}; | |
use cocoa::foundation::{NSRect, NSPoint, NSSize, NSAutoreleasePool, NSProcessInfo, | |
NSString}; | |
use cocoa::appkit::{NSApp, NSApplication, NSApplicationActivationPolicyRegular, NSWindow, | |
NSBackingStoreBuffered, NSMenu, NSMenuItem, NSWindowStyleMask, | |
NSRunningApplication, NSApplicationActivateIgnoringOtherApps}; |