harismuneer /
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myhomeproduction / repository
Guide to excellent variety of Electronics Appliances for Home and Kitchen online in India produced to enhance efficiency in the kitchen. Save time in food preparation with My Home Product Guide kitchen products. Best Kitchen Products in India 2020 Guide to excellent variety of Kitchen Products online in India produced to enhance efficiency in the kitchen. Top 7 Best Food Processors Nourishment processor is an ideal apparatus to deal with constantly expending nourishment planning assignments like puree soups, massage batter, slash, cut, granulate meat and others. To buy the best food processors in India, we suggest considering the underneath significant elements. 7 Best Food Processors in India 1. Preethi Food Processor 2. Philips Food Processor 3. Inalsa Food Processor 4. Bajaj Food Processor 5. Singer Food Processor 6. Usha Food Processor 7. Inalsa inox food processor Top 5 Best Induction Cooktop Tired of cooking in gas? Don’t worry we are come with advanced technology induction cooktop for helping in your daily life. Electricity is the best source available today that can go on to replace LPG as the primary fuel in the days to come. The Induction Cooktops have become hugely popular because it presents a better and more comfortable option for the Indian homemaker. 5 Best Induction Cooktops in India 1. Philips Viva Collection 2. Prestige PIC 20 3. Bajaj Majesty 4. Usha Cook Joy 5. Philips Viva Collection Top 7 Best Roti Maker Making round Rotis is sometimes complicated and time-consuming. So how can you reduce the time to knead the perfect roti to prepare your lunch on time? The roti maker can help. Here are some of the best roti manufacturers currently available in India. We rotate every day. These roti makers can be a solution for housewives, singles and even students who live outside the home and it is always better than roti maker wooden. 7 Best Roti Maker in India 1. BAJAJ VACCO 900W “Go-Ezzee” non-stick Chapati Maker C-02 Silver 2. Prestige PRM 3.0 Roti and Khakra Maker Prestige PRM 3.0 Roti and Khakra Maker 3. Sunflame RM1 Roti Maker 900 watts (silver / black) Sunflame RM1 Roti Maker 900 watts (silver / black) 4. Prestigious creator PRM 1.0 Roti and Khakra Prestigious creator PRM 1.0 Roti and Khakra 5. National manufacturer Xodi Eagle / Roti Eagle Made Life 4500 (Eagle with Demo CD) 6.Prestige Roti Maker PRM 5.0 with demo CD with free plastic kitchen machine 7. Jaipan JDRM-901 1000-Watt Jumbo Roti Maker (Black) Top 7 Best Juicer Drinking crisp juice is the most beneficial and nutritious method for beginning a day. Contrasted with pre-stuffed juices, they have more supplements and minerals. Having the best juicer in India at home lets you make juices whenever you need – without making your hands or kitchen stage muddled. In spite of the fact that buying a juicer is certifiably not a significant venture, it is still better to comprehend the determinations and your necessities. Alongside that, we have additionally given a rundown of Best Juicer in India 2020. In the event that you haven’t got a lot of time, you can pick any item referenced beneath. 7 Best Juicer in India 1. Kuvings Professional B1700 Cold Press Whole Slow Juicer 2. Philips Viva Collection HR1863/20 2-Liter Juicer (Black/Silver) 3. Sujata Powermatic Plus 900 Juicer 4. Panasonic MJ-L500 Cold Press Juicer 5. Bajaj JEX 16 800-Watt Juicer 6. Inalsa 500-Watt Juicer. 7. Usha Nutripress (362F) 240-Watt Cold Press Slow Juicer Top 7 The Best Water Purifier If you are looking for the best water purifier in India then I must say you are in the right place. In this article, I am going to show you the best water purifier available in India. The list includes: 1. Best RO water purifiers 2. UV water purifiers 3. Best UF (Non-electric) water purifiers Top 7 The Best Refrigerator It is a great feeling to have a glass of chilled water on a hot afternoon. What do you do then? It is very simple. Open the Refrigerator and take your pick from the water bottles to quench your thirst. Naturally, you have to do your homework right before buying the best Refrigerator of your choice. There are hundreds of fridge brands available in the market. Frankly speaking, these brands can confuse you a lot with their tall claims. You need a simple guide to help you narrow down your choices. This article provides the right answers thereby enabling you to make a simple but informed choice. Here are a few best refrigerator brands that will be a great choice especially in the Philippines. 1. LG 260 L 4 Star Frost Free Double Door Best Refrigerator (GL-I292RPZL, Shiny Steel, Smart Inverter Compressor) 2. Whirlpool 340 L 3 Star Inverter Frost-Free Double Door Refrigerator (IF INV CNV 355 ELT COOL ILLUSIA(3S), Cool Illusia) 3. Godrej 190 L Direct Cool Single Door 3 Star Refrigerator In-Built MP3 Player (Noble Purple, RD 1903 PM 3.2 NBL PRP) 4. Samsung 253 L 3 Star Inverter Frost-Free Double Door Refrigerator (RT28T3743S8/HL, Elegant Inox) 5. Whirlpool 245 L 3 Star Frost-Free Double-Door Refrigerator (Neo DF258 ROY (3S), Arctic Steel) 6. Samsung 275 L Frost Free Double Door 5 Star (2019) Refrigerator 7. LG 190 L Direct Cool Single Door 4 Star (2020) Refrigerator with Base Drawer (Blue Plumeria, GL-D201ABPY) Best Dishwasher in India 2020 Washing of dishes by hand is gone nowadays. We have brought advanced technology dishwasher for you. Investing in a dishwasher not only saves time but also saves energy and water as well. Dishwashers are an advanced way to do your daily chore of washing dishes. It frees up your time and saves you from the monotony of regular washing. Additionally, it adds an aesthetic appeal to the interiors of your kitchen. We’re here to help you find the best dishwasher in India for your home. This article will help you in choosing the best dishwashers for your home. Top 7 Dishwasher 1. Bosch Free Standing 12 Place Settings SMS60L18IN 2. Siemens Free Standing 12 Place Settings SN26L801IN 3. LG 14 Place Settings Dishwasher (DFB424FP, Platinum Silver) 4. IFB Neptune VX Fully Electronic Dishwasher (12 Place Settings, Dark Silver) 5. Faber 12 Place Settings Dishwasher (FFSD 6PR 12S) 6. Bosch Free-Standing 12 Place Settings Dishwasher (SMS66GI01I, Silver Inox) 7. Voltas Beko 8 Place Table Top Dishwasher (DT8S, Silver) Best Air cooler in India 2020 Do you ever think about how to stay cool without AC in summer? You are right in thinking we are brought the best air cooler in India. As well as budget-friendly for everyone. Some other factors that you must consider are operation, ease of installation, and maintenance. We have explained them in detail in the Buying Guide below. Top 7 Air cooler 1. Crompton Ozone 75-Litre Desert Air Cooler (White/Grey) 2. Symphony Siesta 70 Ltrs Air Cooler (White) 3. Maharaja Whiteline Rambo AC-303 65 L Air Cooler (White and Grey) 4. Bajaj DC2015 Icon 43 Ltrs Room Air Cooler (White) – For Large Room 5. Orient Electric CD5003H 50-Litre Desert Air Cooler (Grey/Orange) 6. Bajaj MD2020 54 Ltrs Room Air Cooler (White) – for Medium Room 7. Crompton Aura Woodwool 55-Litre Desert Cooler (White-Maroon) Best Washing Machine in India 2020 My Home Product Guide provides complete guide of Best Washing Machine in India with unique features and state of the art design combined which are economic, safe and efficient. Top 7 Best Washing Machine 1. IFB 8 kg Fully-Automatic Front Loading Washing Machine (Senator Aqua SX, Silver, Inbuilt heater, Aqua Energy water softener) 2. LG 6 kg Inverter Fully-Automatic Front Loading Washing Machine (FH0H3NDNL02) 3. Bosch 7 kg Fully-Automatic Front Loading Washing Machine (WAK24268IN, silver/grey, Inbuilt Heater) 4. Whirlpool 7.2 Kg Semi-Automatic Top Loading Washing Machine (ACESUPREME PLUS 7.2, Coral Red, Ace Wash Station) 5. LG 6.2 kg Inverter Fully-Automatic Top Loading Washing Machine (T7288NDDLG.ASFPEIL, Middle Free Silver) 6. Bosch 8 kg Inverter Fully-Automatic Front Loading Washing Machine (WAT24464IN, Silver, Inbuilt Heater) 7. SAMSUNG WT725QPNDMP 7.2 KG SEMI AUTOMATIC TOP LOADING WASHING MACHINE Best Cooling Tower Fan in India 2020 Hot summer? Feeling boiled egg? Don’t worry that the days are gone now. We are here with you for making you feel better in the tropical summer season. Cooling Tower fan is more energy efficient. Even a tower fan with average rating consumes below 50 watts which are a lot better than air cooler (100 watts) and air conditioner (500 watts). And of course, we can’t ignore the fact that tower fans have a cool design. Due to their shape and slim width, they look modern and great for any room. In this post, I’m going to rank the 10 best cooling tower fans in India. They’re selected based on brand, features, and user ratings. Top 7 Cooling Tower Fan 1. Castor Cool Breeze Tower Fan with 25 Feet Air Delivery, 4-Way Air Flow, High Speed, Anti Rust Body(4 Color) 2. Deco Air Tower Elegant Indoor Fan with Remote (Black and White, 35 W) 3. Ozeri Ultra 42” Wind Adjustable Oscillating Noise Reduction Technology Tower Fan 4. HONEYWELL Fresh Breeze Tower Fan with Remote Control HYF048 Black with Programmable Thermostat, Timer Shut-Off Function & Dust Filter 5. Lasko 4930 Oscillating High-Velocity Tower Fan with Remote Control – Features Built-in Timer and Louvered Air Flow Control 6. Bionaire BT16RBS-IN 40-Watt Remote Control Tower Fan (Black and Silver) 7. Kenstar 15 Litre Tower Cooler with Muti-Function Remote Control New Model Visit: https://myhomeproductguide.com/category/kitchen-appliances/
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harismuneer /
🎓 A step-by-step guide containing everything you need to know about Ph.D/Masters admissions in Computer Science. Moreover, it's augmented with excellent resources including scholarships, internships and research programs.
MateusNobreSilva /
PHPMailer PHPMailer – A full-featured email creation and transfer class for PHP Test status codecov.io Latest Stable Version Total Downloads License API Docs Features Probably the world's most popular code for sending email from PHP! Used by many open-source projects: WordPress, Drupal, 1CRM, SugarCRM, Yii, Joomla! and many more Integrated SMTP support – send without a local mail server Send emails with multiple To, CC, BCC and Reply-to addresses Multipart/alternative emails for mail clients that do not read HTML email Add attachments, including inline Support for UTF-8 content and 8bit, base64, binary, and quoted-printable encodings SMTP authentication with LOGIN, PLAIN, CRAM-MD5, and XOAUTH2 mechanisms over SMTPS and SMTP+STARTTLS transports Validates email addresses automatically Protects against header injection attacks Error messages in over 50 languages! DKIM and S/MIME signing support Compatible with PHP 5.5 and later, including PHP 8.1 Namespaced to prevent name clashes Much more! Why you might need it Many PHP developers need to send email from their code. The only PHP function that supports this directly is mail(). However, it does not provide any assistance for making use of popular features such as encryption, authentication, HTML messages, and attachments. Formatting email correctly is surprisingly difficult. There are myriad overlapping (and conflicting) standards, requiring tight adherence to horribly complicated formatting and encoding rules – the vast majority of code that you'll find online that uses the mail() function directly is just plain wrong, if not unsafe! The PHP mail() function usually sends via a local mail server, typically fronted by a sendmail binary on Linux, BSD, and macOS platforms, however, Windows usually doesn't include a local mail server; PHPMailer's integrated SMTP client allows email sending on all platforms without needing a local mail server. Be aware though, that the mail() function should be avoided when possible; it's both faster and safer to use SMTP to localhost. Please don't be tempted to do it yourself – if you don't use PHPMailer, there are many other excellent libraries that you should look at before rolling your own. Try SwiftMailer , Laminas/Mail, ZetaComponents etc. License This software is distributed under the LGPL 2.1 license, along with the GPL Cooperation Commitment. Please read LICENSE for information on the software availability and distribution. Installation & loading PHPMailer is available on Packagist (using semantic versioning), and installation via Composer is the recommended way to install PHPMailer. Just add this line to your composer.json file: "phpmailer/phpmailer": "^6.5" or run composer require phpmailer/phpmailer Note that the vendor folder and the vendor/autoload.php script are generated by Composer; they are not part of PHPMailer. If you want to use the Gmail XOAUTH2 authentication class, you will also need to add a dependency on the league/oauth2-client package in your composer.json. Alternatively, if you're not using Composer, you can download PHPMailer as a zip file, (note that docs and examples are not included in the zip file), then copy the contents of the PHPMailer folder into one of the include_path directories specified in your PHP configuration and load each class file manually: <?php use PHPMailer\PHPMailer\PHPMailer; use PHPMailer\PHPMailer\Exception; require 'path/to/PHPMailer/src/Exception.php'; require 'path/to/PHPMailer/src/PHPMailer.php'; require 'path/to/PHPMailer/src/SMTP.php'; If you're not using the SMTP class explicitly (you're probably not), you don't need a use line for the SMTP class. Even if you're not using exceptions, you do still need to load the Exception class as it is used internally. Legacy versions PHPMailer 5.2 (which is compatible with PHP 5.0 — 7.0) is no longer supported, even for security updates. You will find the latest version of 5.2 in the 5.2-stable branch. If you're using PHP 5.5 or later (which you should be), switch to the 6.x releases. Upgrading from 5.2 The biggest changes are that source files are now in the src/ folder, and PHPMailer now declares the namespace PHPMailer\PHPMailer. This has several important effects – read the upgrade guide for more details. Minimal installation While installing the entire package manually or with Composer is simple, convenient, and reliable, you may want to include only vital files in your project. At the very least you will need src/PHPMailer.php. If you're using SMTP, you'll need src/SMTP.php, and if you're using POP-before SMTP (very unlikely!), you'll need src/POP3.php. You can skip the language folder if you're not showing errors to users and can make do with English-only errors. If you're using XOAUTH2 you will need src/OAuth.php as well as the Composer dependencies for the services you wish to authenticate with. Really, it's much easier to use Composer! A Simple Example <?php //Import PHPMailer classes into the global namespace //These must be at the top of your script, not inside a function use PHPMailer\PHPMailer\PHPMailer; use PHPMailer\PHPMailer\SMTP; use PHPMailer\PHPMailer\Exception; //Load Composer's autoloader require 'vendor/autoload.php'; //Create an instance; passing `true` enables exceptions $mail = new PHPMailer(true); try { //Server settings $mail->SMTPDebug = SMTP::DEBUG_SERVER; //Enable verbose debug output $mail->isSMTP(); //Send using SMTP $mail->Host = 'smtp.example.com'; //Set the SMTP server to send through $mail->SMTPAuth = true; //Enable SMTP authentication $mail->Username = 'user@example.com'; //SMTP username $mail->Password = 'secret'; //SMTP password $mail->SMTPSecure = PHPMailer::ENCRYPTION_SMTPS; //Enable implicit TLS encryption $mail->Port = 465; //TCP port to connect to; use 587 if you have set `SMTPSecure = PHPMailer::ENCRYPTION_STARTTLS` //Recipients $mail->setFrom('from@example.com', 'Mailer'); $mail->addAddress('joe@example.net', 'Joe User'); //Add a recipient $mail->addAddress('ellen@example.com'); //Name is optional $mail->addReplyTo('info@example.com', 'Information'); $mail->addCC('cc@example.com'); $mail->addBCC('bcc@example.com'); //Attachments $mail->addAttachment('/var/tmp/file.tar.gz'); //Add attachments $mail->addAttachment('/tmp/image.jpg', 'new.jpg'); //Optional name //Content $mail->isHTML(true); //Set email format to HTML $mail->Subject = 'Here is the subject'; $mail->Body = 'This is the HTML message body <b>in bold!</b>'; $mail->AltBody = 'This is the body in plain text for non-HTML mail clients'; $mail->send(); echo 'Message has been sent'; } catch (Exception $e) { echo "Message could not be sent. Mailer Error: {$mail->ErrorInfo}"; } You'll find plenty to play with in the examples folder, which covers many common scenarios including sending through gmail, building contact forms, sending to mailing lists, and more. If you are re-using the instance (e.g. when sending to a mailing list), you may need to clear the recipient list to avoid sending duplicate messages. See the mailing list example for further guidance. That's it. You should now be ready to use PHPMailer! Localization PHPMailer defaults to English, but in the language folder you'll find many translations for PHPMailer error messages that you may encounter. Their filenames contain ISO 639-1 language code for the translations, for example fr for French. To specify a language, you need to tell PHPMailer which one to use, like this: //To load the French version $mail->setLanguage('fr', '/optional/path/to/language/directory/'); We welcome corrections and new languages – if you're looking for corrections, run the PHPMailerLangTest.php script in the tests folder and it will show any missing translations. Documentation Start reading at the GitHub wiki. If you're having trouble, head for the troubleshooting guide as it's frequently updated. Examples of how to use PHPMailer for common scenarios can be found in the examples folder. If you're looking for a good starting point, we recommend you start with the Gmail example. To reduce PHPMailer's deployed code footprint, examples are not included if you load PHPMailer via Composer or via GitHub's zip file download, so you'll need to either clone the git repository or use the above links to get to the examples directly. Complete generated API documentation is available online. You can generate complete API-level documentation by running phpdoc in the top-level folder, and documentation will appear in the docs folder, though you'll need to have PHPDocumentor installed. You may find the unit tests a good reference for how to do various operations such as encryption. If the documentation doesn't cover what you need, search the many questions on Stack Overflow, and before you ask a question about "SMTP Error: Could not connect to SMTP host.", read the troubleshooting guide. Tests PHPMailer tests use PHPUnit 9, with a polyfill to let 9-style tests run on older PHPUnit and PHP versions. Test status If this isn't passing, is there something you can do to help? Security Please disclose any vulnerabilities found responsibly – report security issues to the maintainers privately. See SECURITY and PHPMailer's security advisories on GitHub. Contributing Please submit bug reports, suggestions and pull requests to the GitHub issue tracker. We're particularly interested in fixing edge-cases, expanding test coverage and updating translations. If you found a mistake in the docs, or want to add something, go ahead and amend the wiki – anyone can edit it. If you have git clones from prior to the move to the PHPMailer GitHub organisation, you'll need to update any remote URLs referencing the old GitHub location with a command like this from within your clone: git remote set-url upstream https://github.com/PHPMailer/PHPMailer.git Please don't use the SourceForge or Google Code projects any more; they are obsolete and no longer maintained. Sponsorship Development time and resources for PHPMailer are provided by Smartmessages.net, the world's only privacy-first email marketing system. Smartmessages.net privacy-first email marketing logo Donations are very welcome, whether in beer 🍺, T-shirts 👕, or cold, hard cash 💰. Sponsorship through GitHub is a simple and convenient way to say "thank you" to PHPMailer's maintainers and contributors – just click the "Sponsor" button on the project page. If your company uses PHPMailer, consider taking part in Tidelift's enterprise support programme. PHPMailer For Enterprise Available as part of the Tidelift Subscription. The maintainers of PHPMailer and thousands of other packages are working with Tidelift to deliver commercial support and maintenance for the open source packages you use to build your applications. Save time, reduce risk, and improve code health, while paying the maintainers of the exact packages you use. Learn more. Changelog See changelog. History PHPMailer was originally written in 2001 by Brent R. Matzelle as a SourceForge project. Marcus Bointon (coolbru on SF) and Andy Prevost (codeworxtech) took over the project in 2004. Became an Apache incubator project on Google Code in 2010, managed by Jim Jagielski. Marcus created his fork on GitHub in 2008. Jim and Marcus decide to join forces and use GitHub as the canonical and official repo for PHPMailer in 2013. PHPMailer moves to the PHPMailer organisation on GitHub in 2013. What's changed since moving from SourceForge? Official successor to the SourceForge and Google Code projects. Test suite. Continuous integration with Github Actions. Composer support. Public development. Additional languages and language strings. CRAM-MD5 authentication support. Preserves full repo history of authors, commits and branches from the original SourceForge project.
59/100 healthrobfeldmann /
Bootstrap is an Ansible playbook that you can use to set up and immediately secure a brand new server, such as a fresh Linode. This playbook is inspired and largely based off of Bryan Kennedy's excellent post My First 5 Minutes On A Server; Or, Essential Security for Linux Servers. There's also some stuff from Linode's own Getting Started and Securing Your Server guides.
20/100 healthjojo1317 /
There are many good resources for learning Git. (Here's an excellent online book, and this is my videos series introducing Git and GitHub.) But once you've learned the basics, it can be hard to remember which commands to use to execute the most common tasks. I went searching for a Git reference guide that would be useful for beginners like myself, but didn't find anything ideal: Git - the simple guide is useful as a high-level overview of the basic commands, but doesn't provide enough details. Git Cheatsheet uses a nice interactive approach to summarize a ton of git commands on one screen, but it doesn't give you any sense of workflow. Git Reference is close to what I was looking for, and links each entry to the relevant section of Pro Git (awesome!), but is too long for a quick reference. So, I decided to make my own reference guide! The guide below is organized by task, with an emphasis on basic tasks and common command line arguments. It begins with the workflow for cloning, updating, and syncing with a remote repo because that's a common way to get started with Git and GitHub. Note that this is only a reference guide, and will not teach you Git. It does not explain the difference between staged and committed, what to do with a .gitignore file, or when to create a branch. But if you are already familiar with those concepts, this guide will hopefully refresh your memory and help you to discover other commands you might need. Please enjoy, and let me know your thoughts or questions in the comments! Cloning a remote repo (that you created or forked on GitHub) git clone < your-repo-URL >: copies your remote repo to your local machine (in a subdirectory with the repo's name), and automatically creates an "origin" handle git remote add upstream < forked-repo-URL >: adds an "upstream" handle for the repo you forked git remote -v: shows the handles for your remotes git remote show < handlename >: inspect a remote in detail Tracking, committing, and pushing your changes git add < name >: if untracked, start tracking a file or directory; if tracked and modified, stage it for committing git reset HEAD < name >: unstage a changed file git commit -m "message": commits everything that has been staged with a message -a -m "message": automatically stages any modified files, then commits --amend -m "new message": fixes the message from the last commit git push origin master: pushes your commits to the master branch of the origin Syncing your local repo with the upstream repo git fetch upstream: fetch the upstream and store its master branch in "upstream/master" git merge upstream/master: merge that branch into the working branch Viewing the status of your files git status: check which files have been modified and/or staged since the last commit git diff: shows the diff for files that are modified but not staged --staged: shows the diff for files that are staged but not committed Viewing the commit history git log: shows the detailed commit history -1: only shows the last 1 commit -p: shows the line diff for each commit -p --word-diff: shows the word diff for each commit --stat: shows stats instead of diff details --name-status: shows a simpler version of stat --oneline: just shows commit comments gitk: open a visual commit browser Managing branches git branch: shows a list of local branches < branchname >: create a new branch with that name -d < branchname >: delete a branch -v: show the last commit on each local branch -a: show local and remote branches -va: show the last commit on each local and remote branch --merged: list which branches are already merged into the working branch (safe to delete) --no-merged: list which branches are not merged into the working branch git checkout < branchname >: switch the HEAD pointer to a different branch -b < branchname >: create a new branch and switch to it Removing, deleting, and reverting files git rm < name >: deletes that file from the disk, then stages its deletion --cached < name >: stops tracking a file, then stages its deletion (but does not delete it from the disk) git mv < oldname > < newname >: renames the file on disk, then stages the deletion of the old name and addition of the new name git checkout -- < name >: revert a modified file on disk back to the last committed version Other basic commands git init: initialize Git in an existing directory git config --list: shows your Git configuration touch .gitignore: create an empty .gitignore file
54/100 healthRumeysakeskin /
Completely free Text-to-Speech (TTS) models with excellent Turkish support and multilingual capabilities. No development, just a comprehensive guide to help you find the perfect free TTS solution for your needs.
65/100 healthglitchculture /
Source code originally written by James Silva, to accompany James Silva and John Sedlak's most excellent book 'Building XNA 2.0 Games: A Practical Guide for Independent Game Development', updated to work with XNA 4.0 and Visual C# Express 2010. Included map and character editors were used in creation of Dream.Build.Play winning XBLA title The Dishwasher: Dead Samurai.
50/100 health