Skip to content

Instantly share code, notes, and snippets.

@sanilnaik
sanilnaik / docker-cleanup-resources.md
Created December 19, 2017 11:49 — forked from bastman/docker-cleanup-resources.md
docker cleanup guide: containers, images, volumes, networks

Docker - How to cleanup (unused) resources

Once in a while, you may need to cleanup resources (containers, volumes, images, networks) ...

delete volumes

// see: https://github.com/chadoe/docker-cleanup-volumes

$ docker volume rm $(docker volume ls -qf dangling=true)

$ docker volume ls -qf dangling=true | xargs -r docker volume rm

@sanilnaik
sanilnaik / README.md
Created June 18, 2017 18:47 — forked from joyrexus/README.md
Vanilla JS equivalents of jQuery methods

Sans jQuery

Events

// jQuery
$(document).ready(function() {
  // code
})
@sanilnaik
sanilnaik / gist.md
Created December 30, 2015 07:41 — forked from jareware/gist.md
Project-specific lint rules with ESLint

⇐ back to the gist-blog at jrw.fi

Project-specific lint rules with ESLint

A quick introduction

First there was JSLint, and there was much rejoicing. The odd little language called JavaScript finally had some static code analysis tooling to go with its many quirks and surprising edge cases. But people gradually became annoyed with having to lint their code according to the rules dictated by Douglas Crockford, instead of their own.

So JSLint got forked into JSHint, and there was much rejoicing. You could set it up to only complain about the things you didn't want to allow in your project, and shut up about the rest. JSHint has been the de-facto standard JavaScript linter for a long while, and continues to do so. Yet there will always be things your linter could check for you, but doesn't: your team has agreed on some convention that makes sense for them, but JSHint doesn't have an option

@sanilnaik
sanilnaik / web-servers.md
Last active August 29, 2015 14:27 — forked from willurd/web-servers.md
Big list of http static server one-liners

Each of these commands will run an ad hoc http static server in your current (or specified) directory, available at http://localhost:8000. Use this power wisely.

Discussion on reddit.

Python 2.x

$ python -m SimpleHTTPServer 8000