It says here as Use Speedtest in your programs by wrapping it in the programming language of your choice in the official speedtest cli site. What does this mean? Can I use this results to generate in my flutter application?
Based on this forum, I don't think you could do that.
But, you could use the open-source internet speed test project from M-Lab and Google. You could see the GitHub Repo here.
Related
I am doing my development using a Chromebook and wondered if it is possible to develop SPAs using Flutter using an online IDE such as Cloud9 or Codio?
I have managed to install flutter and run it to install dart but am getting stuck as it can't find a Chrome installation.
Is it possible to develop using the cloud IDE and use by local install of Chrome for testing?
You can also check flutlab.io. It's working on Chromebook (Flutter IDE and even Figma integration). Proof: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dQ0ATecs7Fo
Currently, the only closer web approaches are:
DartPad
CodePen
Codespaces
Codespaces being a full VS Code which is currently on Beta Access which will allow the same coding possibilities as the desktop one.
Link: https://github.com/features/codespaces
Alternatively (to CodeSpaces, at least); GitPod has a pretty serviceable free tier to build a testing workspace. They actually have a Github template you can fork, then create a workspace from:
https://www.gitpod.io/docs/quickstart/flutter
Another nicety is the stack is open source as of last year.
I have been really interested in Flutter for the last few months and have been following the beta Flutter for web information. I was wondering, other than the ones mentioned in the documentation (Firebase, Github, Google Cloud), is there a way to currently test my app via using my Hostgator hosting and use something like Filezilla to publish the application/site?
I understand this is in a beta state. I only ask because the documentation states that there is a way to publish via those services but doesn't mention the way I am asking. I also understand that this is not production-ready.
Thank you all for any help
You can just run:
flutter build web
And then copy the contents of build/web to your web host's document root via a panel or FTP or something else.
For past two days I have been trying to access the scipy official site.
https://www.scipy.org/
I have not been able to access it. I have checked it on multiple service
providers as well as through boxes setup in US. I would trust this site to be
official site and refer to documentation on it.
How does one intimate them ?
Also, meanwhile is there any mirror available for the documentation ?
Best Regards,
Vinayak
There is no official mirror.
You can check the availability of the website via third party tools, such as http://downforeveryoneorjustme.com/docs.scipy.org
The team behind SciPy is generally aware of the unavailability and do their best to put it back up.
The best "next" option is to build the docs yourself locally or rely on the scipy-doc package from your package manager. Under Debian, one can do apt-get install python-scipy-doc and look under /usr/share/doc/python-scipy-doc/html.
The closest that I can reach till now:
http://web.archive.org/web/20161216070200/https://docs.scipy.org/doc/scipy/reference/
It looks it's best to use pydoc.
The most convenient form is to launch it in the browser using localhost http server. This can be done through pydoc -b and one can browse through
most of the relevant documentation for the specific package.
I am aware that it is possible to manage the Application Settings via CLI Tools or PowerShell.
I am sure I read somewhere that there is a REST API to access them as well, but cannot now find any reference to it.
Is this possible?
I recently was looking into this.
An amazingly awesome site to checkout is https://resources.azure.com/. I believe that the CLI Tools and PowerShell Tools use this REST API. I actually used that site to help me use the PowerShell Tools.
Also there are some simple examples using C# here http://blog.davidebbo.com/2015/12/calling-arm-using-plain-rest.html with the code for that blog here https://github.com/davidebbo/AzureWebsitesSamples/tree/master/HttpClientSample. It will help with authentication.
I have given a task to study about google test and google mock. But I want to try out the codes in the book that I have. I went and look around for tutorials of how to install google test and google mock in eclipse on the net. But I can't find a windows base tutorials. Can you guide me in window base.
Well, there is a tool for managing C/C++ dependencies, its name is biicode
Take a look at the Getting Started C/C++ section (it's based on GTest example) and try the examples with GTest and GMock
I think it'll help you start with Google Test library and GMock.
Disclaimer: I work in this company and we're dedicated to manage dependencies and build projects with tools such as Eclipse, MSVC, etc. I hope it helps you ;)