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Codebales holds an ever growing number of solutions to problems that we have experienced in our day to day code writing
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Andrew Fletcher
•
When executing the following command, the response I'm getting is
npm ERR! code E404
npm ERR! 404 Not Found - GET https://registry.npmjs.org/@fortawesome%2fpro-light-svg-icons - Not found
npm ERR! 404
npm ERR! 404 '@fortawesome/pro-light-svg-icons@^5.11.2' is not in this registry.
npm ERR! 404
npm ERR! 404 Note that you can also install from a
npm ERR! 404 tarball, folder, http url, or git url.This error 404 Not Found - GET https://registry.npmjs.org/@fortawesome%2fpro-light-svg-icons - Not...
Andrew Fletcher
•
In Vim, following is an outline of the vi(m) functions you can utilise whilst in...
Andrew Fletcher
•
This article works through the steps to update dependencies in package.json...
Andrew Fletcher
•
JSON structure
Outlining the structure of the elements common attributes:...
Andrew Fletcher
•
Working on a decoupled React / Drupal 9 site.
Aim: Adjust the output of curated...
Andrew Fletcher
•
How to make React calls on a Drupal 9 backend site using the search functionality
Tools
Drupal
9.4
React
The sample sent through from the front-end is as follows:
https://localhost/search?keyword=&sort=changed&type=%20CommissionerHowever, to run requests, the keyword requires a string. Such as searching the word 'committee'.
https://localhost:8006/search?keyword=committeeIf no keyword is entered, the response will be empty.
No results found for "".How to...
Andrew Fletcher
•
This code is from Drupal 9 back-end for a React front-end via REST API.
Working...
Andrew Fletcher
•
A bug bear that I have had for a while with Drupal content is how come the...
Andrew Fletcher
•
Regular expressions (regex) are extremely useful in extracting information from...
Andrew Fletcher
•
Whilst updating nodejs and npm on a Centos 6 or 7 server running Apache, I...
Andrew Fletcher
•
Recently I had an error with a domain smtp server not recognising port 587. To begin to test what was happening I wanted to get some key information about the server. My tool of choice was the dig command. Using the dig command:
dig codebales.comUnderstanding a DNS look up results from Terminal using the dig command. This command causes dig to look up the A record for the domain name codebales.com or whatever you enter. To do this dig starts by...
Andrew Fletcher
•
I had an issue where logging in from the app disconnected. The error that...