Another free alternative of Microsoft Visio is Cacoo. It's an online tool, so you can access your stuff everywhere you go as long as you have internet. It's also very user friendly.
"Cloud" has nothing to do with wireless whatsoever.
It comes from a symbol in network diagrams where a cloud was traditionally used to represent something that's not under the admin's control -- such as the internet.
You know what's in your own company, but whatever lies outside it is mysterious and uncertain, you can't count on anything being or not being there. So it's a cloud.
Hello,
I started developing micro-services using go-micro, but I couldn't figure out how to connect go-micro services from to localhost
to local-docker-compose
.
My local development work flow:
https://cacoo.com/diagrams/kqYosxrpfAQrIWlq/63AFC When I develop one of the service, I stop the service from docker-compose, and start it locally by using go run
.
If run all of services in docker or locally, it works properly, but can't find a way to make it communicate between local and docker. micro services list
can only find service that I run locally, but not in the docker.
Perhaps I need to do some docker-compose configuration, but I can't find document related to this work flow.
Thanks!
Sorry for the late response. and as for the icons here are six that someone made , after you have downloaded them to your dropbox app on your phone, open each glyph individually in iFile, cut it and put it in var -> Mobile-> media-> Foldericons -> foregrounds, you'll need customfoldericons, repo:( fortysixandtwo.com ) . As for the ones I have on my homescreen it'll take a bit of work. As for the ones I have on my homescreen it took a bit of work. I went to this website https://cacoo.com/store/items/10373 and opened and dragged the ones I wanted and edited them to 120x120 and inverted the color to white instead of black. Then I put them in my dropbox and do what I said above.
I copied and pasted that from one of my comments from like 6 months ago
I'll definitely look into it, and as for the icons here are six that someone made , after you have downloaded them to your dropbox app on your phone, open each glyph individually in iFile, cut it and put it in var -> Mobile-> media-> Foldericons -> foregrounds, you'll need customfoldericons, repo:( fortysixandtwo.com ) . As for the ones I have on my homescreen it'll take a bit of work.
As for the ones I have on my homescreen it take a bit of work.I went to this website and open and dragged the ones I wanted and edited them to 120x120 and inverted the color to white instead of black. Then I put them in my dropbox and did what I said to do after you have them in the dropbox. By the way I did the editing of the glyphs on my mac so unfortunately I don't know how someone would go about doing this on Windows.
If I did a shitty job of explaining what I did just say so and I'll to be break it down more.
Alright so I had some success with it, I couldn't really get them individually with PS Mobile, so I experimented with it on my mac and I found this site that I could just pull them individually and edited them so I can use them as folder icons. I already had about 3 that someone put in a dropbox that I was using as folder icons. But when I applied the ones I had pulled and edited, they were a bit blurry the Owl is one that I got beforehand, and the tiger and the cobra are ones I had made. Here is the home screen with the folder icons
Totally. When I started my current project I swore I wouldn't touch an IDE for months and would design everything out first, but after a few weeks (and dozens of pages of notes) I realized that the further I designed, the less effective my design would be since I wasn't sure what intricacies (as you put it) I was missing that would only be uncovered by the code. Since then I've been struggling with stopping to design instead of code but I've found that keeping a blog about my project (even if I'm the only one reading it) helps me to work out my design ideas and solve problems (the "rubber duck debugging" thing). I think things like Cacoo are great tools as well, but I find it hard to design with them since my implementation inevitably changes once I actually start writing code. I like the week-to-week milestone thing. I should try that. My normal MO is really haphazard.
I've also found that while I love games and the idea of creating games, there's a LOT of tedium involved in creating an entire game and I find that I'm much better at and interested in designing and coding systems (particularly procedural systems) rather than actual entire games. I've found that design is much easier when it's stuff I'm really interested in creating. Sounds obvious, but it wasn't apparent to me at first.