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!!install!! — 4 Risk Management

The "4 risk management" strategies are not random choices; they are a hierarchy of actions designed to optimize the risk-reward balance. Let us examine each in detail.

Many industries require a formal risk framework to meet legal standards. 💡 Key Takeaway 4 risk management

Everything starts with knowing what you are up against. This phase involves brainstorming potential pitfalls, including financial shifts, legal changes, cybersecurity threats, or operational failures. Tools like SWOT analysis or risk registers are commonly used here to document every possible "what if." The "4 risk management" strategies are not random

This article offers a deep dive into these four strategies, exploring how they work, when to apply them, and why mastering them is essential for long-term organizational resilience. 💡 Key Takeaway Everything starts with knowing what

Once you have a list of potential threats, you must prioritize them. answers two questions: How likely is this? and How bad will it be?

How you can help?

I've never charged anything for this project, even did a lot of support for free. I'm still willing to help even if I offer paid support. Not everyone can afford paying me money. You can help by leaving meaningful comment or by starting a discussion, even negative feedback is valuable. I will know that people like this web based terminal. Visitor statistics don't tell everthing.

Thanks

I want to thanks a few services that provided free accounts for this Open Source project:

Here are statuses of those services on master branch:

And devel branch:

The "4 risk management" strategies are not random choices; they are a hierarchy of actions designed to optimize the risk-reward balance. Let us examine each in detail.

Many industries require a formal risk framework to meet legal standards. 💡 Key Takeaway

Everything starts with knowing what you are up against. This phase involves brainstorming potential pitfalls, including financial shifts, legal changes, cybersecurity threats, or operational failures. Tools like SWOT analysis or risk registers are commonly used here to document every possible "what if."

This article offers a deep dive into these four strategies, exploring how they work, when to apply them, and why mastering them is essential for long-term organizational resilience.

Once you have a list of potential threats, you must prioritize them. answers two questions: How likely is this? and How bad will it be?

JavaScript Terminal Demo

This is a simple demo, using a JavaScript interpreter. (If the cursor is not blinking, click on the terminal to activate it.) You can type any JavaScript expression, there is debug function dir (like in Python).

You can use jQuery's "$" method to manipulate the page. You also have access to this terminal in the "term" variable. Try dir(term) or demo() for demo typing animation.

NOTE: for unknow reason this demo doesn't work on Mobile, but I assure you that the library do works on mobile. Check full screen version. The issue with the demo is tracked on GitHub issue.

JavaScript code:

// ref: https://stackoverflow.com/q/67322922/387194
var __EVAL = (s) => eval(`void (__EVAL = ${__EVAL}); ${s}`);

jQuery(function($, undefined) {
    $('#term_demo').terminal(function(command) {
        if (command !== '') {
            try {
                var result = __EVAL(command);
                if (result !== undefined) {
                    this.echo(new String(result));
                }
            } catch(e) {
                this.error(new String(e));
            }
        }
    }, {
        greetings: 'JavaScript Interpreter',
        name: 'js_demo',
        height: 200,
        prompt: 'js> '
    });
});

You can also try JavaScript REPL Online, with Book about JavaScript and Terminal on 404 Error page (with a lot of features like chat and games).

Download

Complete source with few examples from github

Or just the files:

Installation

You can download files locally or use:

Bower:

bower install jquery.terminal

NPM:

npm install --save jquery.terminal

Then you can include the scripts in your HTML

:
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/jquery"></script>
<script src="js/jquery.terminal-2.46.0.min.js"></script>
<!-- With modern browsers, jQuery mousewheel is not actually needed; scrolling will still work -->
<script src="js/jquery.mousewheel-min.js"></script>
<link href="css/jquery.terminal-2.46.0.min.css" rel="stylesheet"/>

You can also grab the files using a CDN (Content Distribution Network):

<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jquery.terminal/2.46.0/js/jquery.terminal.min.js"></script>
<link href="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jquery.terminal/2.46.0/css/jquery.terminal.min.css" rel="stylesheet"/>

or

<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/jquery.terminal/js/jquery.terminal.min.js"></script>
<link href="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/jquery.terminal/css/jquery.terminal.min.css" rel="stylesheet"/>

And optional but recomended:

<script src="https://unpkg.com/js-polyfills/keyboard.js"></script>
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/gh/jcubic/static/js/wcwidth.js"></script>

If you always want the latest version, you can grab the files from unpkg without specifying version number

<script src="https://unpkg.com/jquery.terminal/js/jquery.terminal.js"></script>
<link href="https://unpkg.com/jquery.terminal/css/jquery.terminal.css" rel="stylesheet"/>

License

The jQuery Terminal Emulator plugin is released under the MIT license.

It contains:

Comments

You can use the terminal below to leave a comment. Click to activate. If you have a question, you can create an issue on github, ask on stackoverflow (you can use the "jquery-terminal" tag). You can also send email with SO question or jump to the chat.

If you have a feature request, you can also add a GitHub issue.

If you've found an issue with this website, you can add issue to the jquery.terminal-www repo.

If you'll ask question in Comments, you can subscribe to comments RSS to see reply, when it's added.