// variable
int x = 1;
// constant
final int y = 2;
(async () => { | |
// FarmersWorld Bot Script v1.0.6 | |
// อัพเดทล่าสุด 13/11/2021 เวลา 03:30 น. | |
// ตัวแปรสำหรับตั้งค่าการเติม energy และ ซ่อมอุปกรณ์ | |
// หากอยากให้ปิดอันไหนก็ใส่ค่าเป็น 0 เช่นอยากปิดการเติม energy ก็เปลี่ยนค่าเป็น 0 | |
// ตัวอย่าง | |
// let autoFillEnergy = 0 | |
let autoFillEnergy = 1 | |
let autoRepair = 1 |
const fetchSheet = async (sheetId) => { | |
try { | |
var records = [] | |
const response = await fetch( | |
`https://spreadsheets.google.com/feeds/list/${sheetId}/od6/public/values?alt=json`, | |
); | |
const responseJson = await response.json(); | |
const { entry } = responseJson.feed; | |
records = entry.map(row => ({ | |
column1: row.gsx$column1.$t, |
# ============ Login K-Bank ======================== | |
# To Use provide your username and password | |
# chmod -R 777 login_k-bank.sh | |
# ./login_k-bank.sh | |
# Please provide your username and password here | |
# This is not the best choice to use this script. because your password is saved on your machine and transfer through script | |
# Please consider K-Bank Open API instead https://apiportal.kasikornbank.com/open-api/ | |
username= | |
password= |
# ============ Login SCB ======================== | |
# To Use provide your username and password | |
# chmod -R 777 login_scb.sh | |
# ./login_scb.sh | |
# Please provide your username and password on https://www.scbeasy.com/ | |
username= | |
password= | |
# Please Specify Your cookie file (Any blank text file is OK.) |
package main | |
import ( | |
"context" | |
"log" | |
"net/http" | |
"time" | |
) | |
func main() { |
Concurrency is a domain I have wanted to explore for a long time because the locks and the race conditions have always intimidated me. I recall somebody suggesting concurrency patterns in golang because they said "you share the data and not the variables".
Amused by that, I searched for "concurrency in golang" and bumped into this awesome slide by Rob Pike: https://talks.golang.org/2012/waza.slide#1 which does a great job of explaining channels, concurrency patterns and a mini-architecture of load-balancer (also explains the above one-liner).
Let's dig in:
To send a request via the sandbox, you can use pm.sendRequest.
pm.test("Status code is 200", function () {
pm.sendRequest('https://postman-echo.com/get', function (err, res) {
pm.expect(err).to.not.be.ok;
pm.expect(res).to.have.property('code', 200);
pm.expect(res).to.have.property('status', 'OK');
});
});
Cross-origin resource sharing (CORS) is a mechanism that allows restricted resources (e.g. fonts) on a web page to be requested from another domain outside the domain from which the first resource was served. This is set on the server-side and there is nothing you can do from the client-side to change that setting, that is up to the server/API. There are some ways to get around it tho.
Sources : MDN - HTTP Access Control | Wiki - CORS
CORS is set server-side by supplying each request with additional headers which allow requests to be requested outside of the own domain, for example to your localhost
. This is primarily set by the header:
Access-Control-Allow-Origin