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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
Installing PHP on OSX and it installed PHP 8.2.x.  However, for my...
Andrew Fletcher
Regular commands for brew   Brew update This updates Homebrew itself....
Andrew Fletcher
This article works through the steps to update dependencies in package.json...
Andrew Fletcher
In terminal I ran a regular command - compose update.  Something I've completed thousands of times previously.  However, this time I received the following response: env: php: No such file or directory  What gives? Well, thinking through what had recently changed... The only major change was upgrading OSX to Monterey.  So a little of Googling and found yep this could be the cause.  PHP has been removed from MacOS since v12 (Monterey), so you first need to...
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
Step 1: Install Homebrew Homebrew is the missing package manager for macOS. As...
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...