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When do you use self in Python? - Stack Overflow Adding an answer because Oskarbi's isn't explicit You use self when: Defining an instance method It is passed automatically as the first parameter when you call a method on an instance, and it is the instance on which the method was called
security - How do I create a self-signed certificate for code signing . . . While you can create a self-signed code-signing certificate (SPC - Software Publisher Certificate) in one go, I prefer to do the following: Creating a self-signed certificate authority (CA) makecert -r -pe -n "CN=My CA" -ss CA -sr CurrentUser ^ -a sha256 -cy authority -sky signature -sv MyCA pvk MyCA cer
php - When should I use self over $this? - Stack Overflow @Sqoo - saying "DO NOT USE self::, use static::" is a strange point to make - those are deliberately not the same operation I think the point you are really making is "it is clearer if you use the actual class name 'MyClass::', rather than 'self::'
How can I create a self-signed certificate for localhost? After days of try, we have adopted the solution openssl exe We use 2 certificates - a CA (self certified Authority certificate) RootCA crt and xhost crt certified by the former We use PowerShell 1 Create and change to a safe directory: cd C:\users\so\crt 2 Generate RootCA pem, RootCA key RootCA crt as self-certified Certification Authority:
oop - Why do you need explicitly have the self argument in a Python . . . In, the first example self x is an instance attribute whereas x is a local variable They are not the same and lie in different namespaces Self Is Here To Stay Many have proposed to make self a keyword in Python, like this in C++ and Java This would eliminate the redundant use of explicit self from the formal parameter list in methods
node. js - NPM self_signed_cert_in_chain - Stack Overflow I've spent two days in node-gyp hell trying to figure out this self-signed cert in keychain issue I've had, and this is the answer that finally got everything working properly :) – Don Brody Commented Mar 7, 2023 at 21:43
Get self signed certificate of remote server - Stack Overflow Get the self signed certificate; Put it into some (e g ~ git-certs cert pem) file; Set git to trust this certificate using http sslCAInfo parameter; In more details: Get self signed certificate of remote server Assuming, the server URL is repos sample com and you want to access it over port 443 There are multiple options, how to get it