Developer Blog

Tipps und Tricks für Entwickler und IT-Interessierte

Laravel | Cookbook

Tutorials, Links

Erste Schritte

Erstellen einer ersten Anwendung

laravel new app --jet
cd app

Datenbankkonfiguraton anpassen in der Datei .env

DB_HOLST=

Datenbank erstellen

composer update 
php artisan key:generate
php artisan migrate

Livewire Komponenten hinzufügen

php artisan vendor:publish --tag=jetstream-views

Frontend erstellen

npm install
npm run dev
php artisan serve

Upgrade

composer self-update --2

Datenbanken

https://laravelarticle.com/laravel-ajax-datatable-crud

Controller

Visitor Count

https://postsrc.com/posts/how-to-implement-visitor-views-or-visitor-counter-in-laravel-application

Links

  • https://laravel-news.com/
  • https://laravel-news.com/learning-laravel-in-2021
  • https://laravel.com/docs/8.x
  • https://www.tutsmake.com/category/laravel-tutorial/
  • https://www.tutsmake.com/laravel-interview-questions-answers-for-1235-year-experience/
  • https://www.larashout.com/
  • https://learn2torials.com/category/laravel
  • https://eloquentbyexample.com/
  • https://laravel.com/docs/8.x/eloquent#introduction

Angular | Creating PDF Documents

Create App

ng new app
cd app

Additional modules

Install jsPDF for creating PDF documents with JavaScript

npm install       jspdf --save
npm install types/jspdf --save

Demo Page

Create demo page

ng generate component pages/PDF

Add demo page to routing

src/app/app-routing.modules.ts

import { NgModule } from '@angular/core';
import { Routes, RouterModule } from '@angular/router';
import { PDFComponent } from './pages/pdf/component';

const routes: Routes = [
	{	path: '',	redirectTo: 'pdf',	pathMatch: 'full',	},
	{	path: 'pdf',	component: PDFComponent,			},
];

@NgModule({
	imports: [RouterModule.forRoot(routes)],
	exports: [RouterModule],
})
export class AppRoutingModule {}

Add PDF functionality

Modify pdf.component.html

src/app/pages/pdf/pdf.component.html

Modify pdf.component.ts

src/app/pages/pdf/pdf.component.ts

Add import for jsPDF

import { jsPDF } from 'jspdf';

Ansible | Getting Started

Installation

Install Python 3

Install Ansible

pip install ansible

Setup virtual machines

In this example, we use Vagrant. But using docker is also a good choice

Create Vagrantfile

Change IP Address and Hostname for each virtual machine

Vagrant.configure("2") do |config|
  config.vm.box = "hashicorp/bionic64"
  config.vm.network "public_network", ip: "172.16.2.191", bridge: "en0: Ethernet"

  config.vm.synced_folder "./data", "/DATA"
  config.vm.hostname = "host1"
end

Start virtual machine

vagrant up
vagrant ssh

Configure virtual machine

Install required programm sshpass for running ansible commands as root on target machines.

sudo apt-get install sshpass

Setup SSH permissions

Create ssh key

ssh-keygen -t rsa

Add id_rsa_<user>.pub to virtual machines into $HOME/.ssh/authorized_keys

Setup config files

etc/ansible/hosts

ansible1
ansible2
ansible3

etc/ansible/ansible.cfg

Create Ansible configuration file in current directory with this content:

[defaults]
interpreter_python = auto

Ansible searches for configuration files in the following order, processing the first file it finds and ignoring the rest:

  1. $ANSIBLE_CONFIG if the environment variable is set.
  2. ansible.cfg if it’s in the current directory.
  3. ~/.ansible.cfg if it’s in the user’s home directory.
  4. /etc/ansible/ansible.cfg, the default config file.

First Test

 ansible -i etc/ansible/hosts all -m ping -u vagrant

Set default Python version on Ubuntu

update-alternatives --install /usr/bin/python python /usr/bin/python3.6 1

Working with Playbooks

Create simple playbook

Create file httpd.yaml

---
- hosts: webservers
  remote_user: ansible
  tasks:
  - name: Ensure apache is installed and updated
    yum:
      name: httpd
      state: latest
    become: yes

Run playbook

ansible-playbook -i etc/ansible/hosts  httpd.yaml -kK

Troubleshooting

Allow SSH root login

$ sudo sed -i 's/#PermitRootLogin prohibit-password/PermitRootLogin yes/' /etc/ssh/sshd_config

Frontend | Toolbox

Installation Overview

NodeJS

Angular

Ionic

Install

npm install -g @ionic/cli

Create App

ionic start Getting-Started tabs --type react

Start App

ionic serve

React / ReactJS

Install

React Native

Stencil

npm init stencil
npm install --save-exact @stencil/core@latest 
npm install --save-dev @types/jest@26.0.12 jest@26.4.2 jest-cli@26.4.2 
npm install --save-dev @types/puppeteer@3.0.1 puppeteer@5.2.1
npm test
npm start

Gatsby

NextJS

NestJS

Usefull Libraries

VideoJSHTML5 player frameworkVideoHomeGithub
Animate on ScrollAnimationHomemichalsnik/aos
ScrollMagicAnimationHome
ScrollRevealJSAnimationHome/jlmakes/scrollreveal
PixiJSGraphicsHomepixijs/pixi.jsthub
AnimeAnimationHomejuliangarnier/anime
ThreeJSGraphicsHomemrdoob/three.js
animate.cssAnimationHomeanimate-css/animate.css
HowlerJSAudio libraryAudioHomeGithub
RevealJSHTML Presentation FrameworkPresentationHomeGithub
ChartJSChartHomeGithub
anime.jsHome
granim.jsCreate fluid and interactive gradient animationsGraphicsHomesarcadass/granim.js
Multiple.jsSharing background across multiple elements using CSSHomeNeXTs/Multiple.js
choreographer-jsA simple library to take care of complicated animations.Homechristinecha/choreographer-js
cleave.jsFormat your <input/> content when you are typingHomenosir/cleave.js
premonishHomemathisonian/premonish
SplittingAnimationHomeCodepenshshaw/splitting/

More to read

Power BI | Importing multiple files

Getting Started

To import multiple files from a folder, the following two steps had to be done:

  • create a list of all files in the folder
  • for each file: read the file and add it to the result table

When importing files with Power BI, you can do both tasks together or each task separately.

The decision, which way to go, ist done after selection the folder:

You could choose between 4 posibilities. Strictly speaking, you have to possibilities, both with the same to final steps.

  1. Load or Combine files
    • Load means, the list of the files will be loaded as table
      Technicaly two things are done:
      • a connection is created in the model
      • the data (list of files) is loaded to the mode
  2. Just Load or Transform data
    • Transform means, you will end up in the Power Query Editor, so you can add additional modifications

In order to better understand the process, we show the two steps separately: one after the other

Load the list of files from folder

Start Power BI and close the start screen, if it is still visible.

Then, click on the Get Data Button in the Home Ribbon

If you click on the small down arrow on the Get Data Button, you have to select the option More

Now, select Folder and click on Connect

Enter the folder (or Browse…) with the files to be loaded and click Ok

After this, Power Query will create a table with all files in the folder.

Now, here is the point to decide, which way to go:

  • Combine
    • Read list of files and combine all files into on table
  • Load
    • Just keep the list of files and return to Power BI
  • Transform
    • Keep the list of files and open the Power Query Editor

We will choose to load the files, because we will do each step later separately

In Power BI Desktop, click on the Data Icon to show the resulting table.

Combine all files into one table

To add additional steps, we need the Power Query Editor.

So click on the 3 dots at the right side of the Query name Samples and choose Edit Query

Now, you are in the Power Query Editor

To combine all files, just click on the small icon beneath the header of the content column:

In the following dialog, you will see all files an a preview of the content for each file. For excel files, you will see the sheet names and the names of the intelligent tables in the sheets.

Click on OK to start the import.

When Power Query is done with this step, you will see the result:

The previous query Samples is still there, but now with the content of all files.

Additionally, you will see four other elements:

How combining the files is done

Each query consists of a list of steps, which are process one after another. Normaly, each step is using the result (data) of the previous step, performs some modifications and has a result (data) for the next step.

So, each step is modifying the whole data of the previous step. Describing some modifications means either

  • do one thing, e.g. add an additional column

or

  • do something for each row in the data
    This means, we need some sort of a loop, like “do xyz for each row in the data

Lets see, how Power Query solves this task.

In the query Samples, exampine the Step Invoke Custom Function1

The Step if performing the M function Table.AddColumn

This functions needs 3 parameter:

  • table: which is normaly the name of the prevoius step
    In our example #”Filtered Hidden Files1″
  • newColumnName: the name for the column to be added
    “Transform File”
  • columnGenerator: a function which is called for each row in the input table and creates the new column content
    each #”Transform File”([Content])

This results in the following procedure:

  • for each row of the list of files (output from step #”Filtered Hidden Files1″)
  • get the content of the column Content (this will be the parameter for the function call)
  • call the function “Transform File”([Content]) to create the column with one parameter: the value of the column ([Content] i

Helper Queries (Required)

This is the required function to create the column content for each file

Helper queries (Optional)

For the resulting query Samples to work, only the function definition is required.

But Power Query add some additional elements, to test the function and show the result

Create a parameter used in the query Transform Sample File and define the curent value Sample File

Define a value for the parameter. Here, the first row in the list of files is used.

Create a query and use an excel workbook as input. The name of the excel file is speficied as a parameter

In this query, the previously create parameter Parameter1 is used as parameter (to much of the word parameter, i know :))

Importing multiple files with different formats

If the selected folder contains files with different format, the result is not what you may be expect:

The list of files contains all files, both csv files and xls files

When combining the files, you can select between the files. So first take a look at an csv file:

The csv file looks as expected:

But the xls files looks strange:

But lets try. Click on ok to combine all files.

But, looking at the resulting query, the data of the xls files still looks strange:

To understand this, take a look into the create transfer function:

The crucial instruction is line 2:

Source = Csv.Document(Parameter3,[Delimiter=",", Columns=10, Encoding=1252, QuoteStyle=QuoteStyle.None]),

The source document (each file in the list of files) is interpreted as csv file.

So, the xls files are also read in as csv files. This leads to the strange result.

You can fix this by adding an additional filter step in the query to select only csv files: