html - When to use lt;p gt; vs. lt;br gt; - Stack Overflow 14 You want to use the <p> tag when you need to break up two streams of information into separate thoughts <p> Now is the time for all good men to come to the aid of their country < p> <p>The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy sleeping dog < p> The <br > tag is used as a forced line break within the text flow of the web page
c++ - What does (~0L) mean? - Stack Overflow I'm doing some X11 ctypes coding, I don't know C but need some help understanding this In the C code below (might be C++ im not sure) we see (~0L) what does that mean? In Javascript and Python ~0
windows - What does p mean in set p? - Stack Overflow What does p stand for in set p=? I know that enables a switch, and I'm fairly sure that I know a is for arithmetic I've heard numerous rumours, some saying p is for prompt, others stating it
c - why is *pp [0] equal to **pp - Stack Overflow So pp [0] points to the address of p, which is 0x2000, and by dereferencing I would expect to get the contents of address 0x2000 That's were your reasoning strays, but understandably so In C, the right hand side of an assignment, or generally an evaluation of an lvalue (vulgo: variable), more precisely an lvalue-to-rvalue conversion, is already a dereferencing! For example, int i, j=0; i=j
Whats P=NP?, and why is it such a famous question? The question of whether P=NP is perhaps the most famous in all of Computer Science What does it mean? And why is it so interesting? Oh, and for extra credit, please post a proof of the statement's
html - When to use lt;span gt; instead lt;p gt;? - Stack Overflow The <p> tag is a p aragraph, and as such, it is a block element (as is, for instance, h1 and div), whereas span is an inline element (as, for instance, b and a) Block elements by default create some whitespace above and below themselves, and nothing can be aligned next to them, unless you set a float attribute to them Inline elements deal with spans of text inside a paragraph They typically
html - What do lt;o:p gt; elements do anyway? - Stack Overflow 112 I've been running into some (standard) issues with Microsoft Office injecting its nasty markup into some html after forwarding an email via Outlook I'm interested to know: Is there a resource that explains what <o:p> elements actually do What other MSO elements are commonly injected
xml - Regular expression \p {L} and \p {N} - Stack Overflow 280 \p{L} matches a single code point in the category "letter" \p{N} matches any kind of numeric character in any script Source: regular-expressions info If you're going to work with regular expressions a lot, I'd suggest bookmarking that site, it's very useful