Storybook default story - storybook

Is it possible to open specific story by default when choosing component story.
For example I have two stories form component A, names DefaultStory and CustomStory. CustomStory is always opened first by default (I guess due to it is first in list alphabetically). I want to have DefaultStory opened first. Any ideas?

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Change order and labels of local tasks in Drupal 9

I've got local tasks displayed as tabs on my users' profile page.
Those local tasks are added by various modules.
I need to change the order of those tabs, and change some of their labels.
I can't figure out how to do that.
I tried using the menu_tokens module to replace those tabs by a real, customizable menu, but unfortunately it's not working correctly in Drupal 9 yet and breaks the whole website. Maybe there's another way which I'm not aware of?
Use hook_local_tasks_alter hook inside your custom module. I've checked and it's still valid in d9.
Inside your module_name.module file place a function named according to the convention function module_name_local_tasks_alter(&$local_tasks) {
Place there a breakpoint or simply var dump the local tasks, you will see, how many local tasks tab goes through this function.
In the end you will find entity.user.canonical, just overwrite the item weight in similar manner:
$local_tasks['entity.user.canonical']['weight'] = -3;
$local_tasks['entity.user.edit_form']['weight'] = -2;
Source: https://codimth.com/blog/web/drupal/how-override-local-task-drupal-8

SSRS hybrid action Go to URL go to report

I'm developing a recoursive bar chart with the capability to navigate through a tree hierarchy by getting parent and child data from stored procedures.
It works well but I need to define a different action for the last node that instead of go to report should be: go to URL.
ssrs Action
Is there any way to do that?
I finally solved by using go to url for both: go to report and go to url.
this is possible by specifying the Url of the report as go to url concatenating the parameters using the HTTG GET syntax.
As you cannot set the report action via an expression, the easiest way I can think of doing this is to have two copies of your control or whatever you need the the action on. Have one point to your report as normal and one that points to your URL. Then set the visibility of each control based on the node.
So, assuming it's the series property that you have the action on...normally the Goto report series would be visible but when you are at the last node, the goto URL series would be visible.
This should work but I've not tested it.
Alternatively, if you can determine if the next node will be the last one, you could have two copies of the report. The first would be your report as it is now and the seconds would be exactly the same but with as different action. You can set an expression to call the correct report in the goto report action properties based on the node level. As I said before though, you will need to know if the node you are looking at is the penultimate one.
Neither solution is that elegant but it should give you what you want,.

Vimperator: Follow hint in new tab and switch to it

I am trying to find a strategy in the Vimperator-logic for opening a link to a new tab and switch to it immediately.
I guess this might be a TMTOWTDI.
My first approach would be to start off with a :command sequence. Unfortunately F - Follow hint in background tab - has no equivalent in the command mode. The best solution for me would be without any change in default behaviour whatsoever.
Another approach might be to combine the default F with switching to next tag gt. This would have to include to pass the parameter for F, say 10 for the tenth link of the document. Unfortunately F10gt does open the tenth link but without switching to the newly opened tab.
A third approach does come to mind when using focus elements: ;y10 yank the destination link, :tabopen + paste clipboard content.
Any ideas of what is doable and the easiest?
This functionality exists as a mode of the hint function. Pressing ;t
will produce the desired result. If you want to map it you can also access the javascript directly.
:js hints.show("t")

How do I delete environment domains and variables in Paw?

I can add new environments, but sometimes I no longer want domains I previously thought I needed.
I can't work out how to delete a variable within the environments or to delete that entire domain. I can delete environments so long as they aren't the last remaining one, but the last one, in order to delete that domain can't be deleted. Is there a special trick I'm missing?
To delete an environment variable or domain in Paw (a quick screencast to explain better is available here):
Go to the environment panel (Window menu > Environments – shortcut: ⌥⌘1)
To delete a variable: hit the minus (-) button on the right side (only available if you have more than one variable)
To delete a domain: click on the domain name pop up button (a blue button on the right side), and pick "Delete Domain"
For previous versions of Paw: You need to select the environment domain first, and then hit the delete key on your keyboard.
Note: this is going to change in the upcoming Paw 2.2, another UI, much easier to understand.

What determines sorting of files in a QFileDialog?

Users open files in our app through a QFileDialog. The order of the filenames is bizarre. What is determining the sorting order, and how can we make it sort by filenames, or otherwise impose our own sorting, perhaps giving it a pointer to our own comparison function?
The documentation and online forums haven't been helpful. Unless it's well hidden, there doesn't seem to be any sorting method, property, etc.
This is a primarily Linux app, but also runs on Macs. (I know nothing about Mac.)
Here is the juicy part of the source code:
QtFileDialog chooser(parent, caption, directory, filter);
/// QtFileDialog is our class derived from QFileDialog
chooser.setModal(true);
chooser.setAcceptMode(acceptMode);
chooser.setFileMode(fileMode);
QStringList hist = chooser.history();
chooser.setHistory(hist);
/* point "x" */
if(chooser.exec()) {
QStringList files = chooser.selectedFiles();
...blah blah blah...
From one of the answers, I tried an evil experiment, adding this ill-informed guesswork code at "point x":
QSortFilterProxyModel *sorter = new QSortFilterProxyModel();
sorter->sort(1); // ???
chooser.setProxyModel(sorter);
But this crashed spectacularly at a point about 33 subroutine calls deep from this level of code. I admit, even after reading the Qt4 documentation and sample code, I have no idea of the proper usage of QSortFilterProxyModel.
Are you using QFileDialog by calling exec()? If you are, you should have a button to switch the view to Detail View. This will give you some column headers that you can click on to sort the files. It should remember that mode the next time the dialog opens but you can force it by calling setViewMode(QFileDialog::Detail) before calling exec().
An alternative is to call the static function QFileDialog::getOpenFileName() which will open a file dialog that is native to the OS on which you are running. Your users may like the familiarity of this option better.
Update 1:
About sort order in screen cap from OP:
This screen capture is actually showing a sorted list. I don't know if the listing behaviour is originating from the Qt dialog or the underlying file system but I know Windows XP and later do it this way.
When sorting filenames with embedded numbers, any runs of consecutive digits are treated as a single number. With the more classic plain string sorting, files would be sorted like this:
A_A_10e0
A_A_9a05
Going character by character, the first 1 sorts before the 9.
.. But with numerical interpretation (as in Windows 7 at least), they are sorted as:
A_A_9a05
A_A_10e0
The 9 sorts before the 10.
So, the sorting you are seeing is alphabetical with numerical interpretation and not just straight character by character. Some deep digging may be required to see if that is Qt behaviour or OS behaviour and whether or not it can be configured.
Update 2:
The QSortFilterProxyModel will sort the strings alphabetically by default so there is not much work to using it to get the behavior you are looking for. Use the following code where you have "point x" in your example.. (you almost had it :)
QSortFilterProxyModel *sorter = new QSortFilterProxyModel();
sorter->setDynamicSortFilter(true); // This ensures the proxy will resort when the model changes
chooser.setProxyModel(sorter);
I think what you need to do is create a QSortFilterProxyModel which you then set in your QFileDialog with QFileDialog::setProxyModel(QAbstractProxyModel * proxyModel)
Here are some relevant links to the Qt 4.6 docs about it.
http://doc.trolltech.com/4.6/qfiledialog.html#setProxyModel
http://doc.trolltech.com/4.6/qsortfilterproxymodel.html#details
I don't think it depends upon the implementation of Qt libraries... But upon the Native OS implementation..
For example in Windows,
if you use QFileDialog, it will display the Files and Directories by Name sorted.. It is the same when used in other applications. In the sense that, if you try to open a file through MS- Word, it indeed displays the Files and directories as Name sorted by default..
And am not sure about other environments since am not used to them...
But in Windows, you can change the sorted order by right-click in the area of Files and Directories display and can select the options you like.. For e.g like Name,size,type, modified... And also which is similar, when you use an MS-Word application...
So, I believe it does depend on the Native OS implementation and not on QFileDialog's...

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