Here is easy steps to try Windows 10 on ARM or Ubuntu for ARM64 on your Apple Silicon Mac. Enjoy!
NOTE: that this is current, 10/1/2021 state.
- Install Xcode from App Store or install Command Line Tools on your Mac
| using System; | |
| using System.Text.RegularExpressions; | |
| using System.Collections.Generic; | |
| using Cysharp.Threading.Tasks; | |
| using UnityEngine; | |
| using UnityEngine.Networking; | |
| using System.Linq; | |
| using System.Threading; | |
| using System.Text; |
Here is easy steps to try Windows 10 on ARM or Ubuntu for ARM64 on your Apple Silicon Mac. Enjoy!
NOTE: that this is current, 10/1/2021 state.
| name: XXXX | |
| attributes: | |
| LastUpgradeCheck: 1140 | |
| ORGANIZATIONNAME: "kankak, Inc." | |
| options: | |
| bundleIdPrefix: com.xxxx.xxxxxxxx | |
| deploymentTarget: | |
| iOS: 13.1.3 | |
| configs: | |
| Develop Debug: debug |
| #!/usr/bin/env xcrun swift | |
| let arguments = Array(Process.arguments.dropFirst()) | |
| print(arguments.joinWithSeparator(",")) |
Magic numbers are the first bits of a file which uniquely identify the type of file. This makes programming easier because complicated file structures need not be searched in order to identify the file type.
For example, a jpeg file starts with ffd8 ffe0 0010 4a46 4946 0001 0101 0047 ......JFIF.....G ffd8 shows that it's a JPEG file, and ffe0 identify a JFIF type structure. There is an ascii encoding of "JFIF" which comes after a length code, but that is not necessary in order to identify the file. The first 4 bytes do that uniquely.
This gives an ongoing list of file-type magic numbers.