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Top Forums Programming Wuhan Coronavirus Status App for China - Rapid Prototype using MQTT and the IoT OnOff IOS App Post 303043764 by Neo on Wednesday 5th of February 2020 10:48:47 PM
Old 02-05-2020
Since the IoT OnOff app developer is unavailable, I have shifted gears and have created a web-based Wuhan Coronavirus stats page from an official Chinese data source. with near-real time updates.

Update: Added screenshot 10 Feb 2020

Wuhan Coronavirus Status App for China - Rapid Prototype using MQTT and the IoT OnOff IOS App-screen-shot-2020-02-10-120237-pmjpg


If these stats help one person, I am happy to have helped out in some small way.

http://bit.ly/2UA37Tr

Information technology, can and should be used to help others, not only for big corporations make huge profits with their surveillance capitalism business models and the morass of fake news and conspiracy theories which are making the global Internet an increasing dark place.
This User Gave Thanks to Neo For This Post:
 

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App::Cmd::Setup(3pm)					User Contributed Perl Documentation				      App::Cmd::Setup(3pm)

NAME
App::Cmd::Setup - helper for setting up App::Cmd classes VERSION
version 0.318 OVERVIEW
App::Cmd::Setup is a helper library, used to set up base classes that will be used as part of an App::Cmd program. For the most part you should refer to the tutorial for how you should use this library. This class is useful in three scenarios: when writing your App::Cmd subclass Instead of writing: package MyApp; use base 'App::Cmd'; ...you can write: package MyApp; use App::Cmd::Setup -app; The benefits of doing this are mostly minor, and relate to sanity-checking your class. The significant benefit is that this form allows you to specify plugins, as in: package MyApp; use App::Cmd::Setup -app => { plugins => [ 'Prompt' ] }; Plugins are described in App::Cmd::Tutorial and App::Cmd::Plugin. when writing abstract base classes for commands That is: when you write a subclass of App::Cmd::Command that is intended for other commands to use as their base class, you should use App::Cmd::Setup. For example, if you want all the commands in MyApp to inherit from MyApp::Command, you may want to write that package like this: package MyApp::Command; use App::Cmd::Setup -command; Do not confuse this with the way you will write specific commands: package MyApp::Command::mycmd; use MyApp -command; Again, this form mostly performs some validation and setup behind the scenes for you. You can use "base" if you prefer. when writing App::Cmd plugins App::Cmd::Plugin is a mechanism that allows an App::Cmd class to inject code into all its command classes, providing them with utility routines. To write a plugin, you must use App::Cmd::Setup. As seen above, you must also use App::Cmd::Setup to set up your App::Cmd subclass if you wish to consume plugins. For more information on writing plugins, see App::Cmd::Manual and App::Cmd::Plugin. AUTHOR
Ricardo Signes <rjbs@cpan.org> COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2012 by Ricardo Signes. This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself. perl v5.14.2 2012-05-05 App::Cmd::Setup(3pm)
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