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سری آموزش 25 قسمتی Git و GitHub

Git Tutorial - 1 - How to Download and Install Git
Git Tutorial - 2 - Config Our Username and Email
Git Tutorial - 3 - Creating Our First Repository
Git Tutorial - 4 - Commit
Git Tutorial - 5 - Adding Files and the Commit Log
Git Tutorial - 6 - Git Workflow
Git Tutorial - 7 - How to Edit Files
Git Tutorial - 8 - Viewing the Changes That You Made
Git Tutorial - 9 - Comparing the Staging Area with the Repository
Git Tutorial - 10 - How to Delete Files
Git Tutorial - 11 - How to Move and Rename Files
Git Tutorial - 12 - Working with an Actual Website
Git Tutorial - 13 - How to Commit Directly to the Repository
Git Tutorial - 14 - Checkout this video (Git it?)
Git Tutorial - 15 - Unstage Files
Git Tutorial - 16 - Getting Old Versions from the Repository
Git Tutorial - 17 - GitHub
Git Tutorial - 18 - Pushing to a GitHub Repository
Git Tutorial - 19 - gitignore and GitHub Desktop
Git Tutorial - 20 - Committing Changes to GitHub
Git Tutorial - 21 - Branches
Git Tutorial - 22 - GitHub Watch Star and Fork
Git Tutorial - 23 - GitHub Issues and Labels
Git Tutorial - 24 - GitHub Wiki
Git Tutorial - 25 - GitHub Organizations and Teams 

سری آموزش 25 قسمتی Git و GitHub
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Visual Studio 2019 version 16.2.2 منتشر شد

Top Issues Fixed in Visual Studio 2019 version 16.2.2

Security Advisory Notices

CVE-2019-1211 Git for Visual Studio Elevation of Privilege Vulnerability

An elevation of privilege vulnerability exists in Git for Visual Studio when it improperly parses configuration files. An attacker who successfully exploited the vulnerability could execute code in the context of another local user. To exploit the vulnerability, an authenticated attacker would need to modify Git configuration files on a system prior to a full installation of the application. The attacker would then need to convince another user on the system to execute specific Git commands. The update addresses the issue by changing the permissions required to edit configuration files. 

Visual Studio 2019 version 16.2.2 منتشر شد
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روشی برای تبدیل برنامه‌های React به PWA

You’ve built a React web app and would love to bring it to iOS and Android. That means you have to learn React Native first, right? As it turns out, there’s an easier way to deploy to mobile. With Capacitor, a new native runtime for web apps, you can deploy any React-based web app as a PWA, iOS, or Android app - all from the same codebase. 

روشی برای تبدیل برنامه‌های React به PWA
مطالب
مجموعه آموزشی رایگان workflow foundation از مایکروسافت
Intro to Windows Workflow Foundation (Part 1 of 7): Workflow in Windows Applications (Level 100)
This webcast is a code-focused introduction to developing workflow-enabled Microsoft Windows platform applications. We cover the basics of developing, designing, and debugging workflow solutions. Gain the knowledge and insight you need to be confident choosing workflow for everyday applications.


Intro to Windows Workflow Foundation (Part 2 of 7): Simple Human Workflow Using E-mail (Level 200)
Have you thought about how you might apply the workflow concept to e-mail? In this webcast New Zealand based regional director, Chris Auld, leads attendees through a simple worked example of the use of SMTP e-mail as part of a workflow solution. Chris demonstrates how to create custom activities to query Active Directory to retrieve user data, send e-mail, and wait for e-mail responses to continue the workflow process. This code-intensive session gives users taking their first steps with workflow a good grounding in some of the key extensibility concepts.


Intro to Windows Workflow Foundation (Part 3 of 7): Hosting and Communications Options in Workflow Scenarios (Level 300)
The session looks at options for hosting workflow applications. We cover managing events, instance tracking, and persistence, and provide a close look at the simple communications mechanisms that are available for you to use in your workflow applications.


Intro to Windows Workflow Foundation (Part 4 of 7): Workflow, Messaging, and Services: Developing Distributed Applications with Workflows (Level 300)
Web service technologies have typically taken a "do-it-yourself" approach to maintaining the interoperation state of services. Using workflow, developers now have tools that allow them to describe the long-running state of their services and delegate much of the state management to the underlying platform. Managing this state correctly becomes even more challenging in applications that coordinate work across multiple services either within an organization or at an Internet scale. This session looks at how developers who use either Microsoft ASMX or Microsoft's framework for building service-oriented applications, code-named "Indigo", can create workflow-oriented applications that are both faster to write and more manageable and flexible once deployed.


Intro to Windows Workflow Foundation (Part 5 of 7): Developing Event Driven State Machine Workflows (Level 300)
State machines used to be something that you had to first draw on paper and then implement in code. This session shows how to use technologies to create event-driven workflows and how to apply this to a typical programming problem. We introduce the concept of a flexible process and show how this can help with modeling real-world processes using state and sequential workflow. Plenty of coding is included to illustrate how you can seamlessly merge state machine design and your code.


Intro to Windows Workflow Foundation (Part 6 of 7): Extending Workflow Capabilities with Custom Activities (Level 300)
It is helpful to think of activities as controls within a workflow, similar to controls used with Microsoft ASP.NET Pages or Microsoft Windows Forms. You can use activities to encapsulate execution logic, communicate with the host and decompose a workflow into reusable components. This session examines the simple process of creating custom activities. If you want to expose activities to other developers designing workflows, you are likely to find this session valuable.


Intro to Windows Workflow Foundation (Part 7 of 7): Developing Rules Driven Workflows (Level 300)
Rules can be a powerful business tool when combined with workflow. In this session, learn how to develop more advanced activities that support the modeling of rich business behavior such as human workflow. Understand when to use rules for business logic, and see how rule policies allow for the description of sophisticated behavior in an integrated and flexible way. This session gives you an interesting insight into the power of using workflow at the core of a line of business application.
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DevOps چیست؟

I was originally inspired to write this post after spending some time talking to recruiters for a company looking to hire a DevOps engineers

DevOps چیست؟