html - Is a replacement of ? - Stack Overflow 16 #160; is the numeric reference for the entity reference nbsp; — they are the exact same thing It's likely your editor is simply inserting the numberic reference instead of the named one See the Wikipedia page for the non-breaking space
html - What is the difference between and ? - Stack Overflow 43 #160; is a non-breaking space ( nbsp;) #xa0; is just the same, but in hexadecimal (in HTML entities, the x character shows that a hexadecimal number is coming) There is basically no difference, A0 and 160 are the same numbers in a different base You should decide whether you really need a non-breaking space, or a simple space would suffice
Difference between breaking and non breaking space ascii characters Having said that, the code 160 is actually outside of the range of regular (7-bit) ASCII The interpretation of 160 as a non-breaking space (or NBSP) character comes from the Latin1 (ISO8859-1) character set
Diferencia entre ascii 160 y 32 - Stack Overflow en español Esta es la diferencia básica entre ASCII 160 y 32, como lo mencionas en el título de tu pregunta En la comparación que estás haciendo la el resultado es falso porque los caracteres de espacio son diferentes después del "9"
Why is a SHA-1 Hash 40 characters long if it is only 160 bit? The title of the question says it all I have been researching SHA-1 and most places I see it being 40 Hex Characters long which to me is 640bit Could it not be represented just as well with only