- html - What do lt; and gt; stand for? - Stack Overflow
I know that the entities lt; and gt; are used for < and >, but I am curious what these names stand for Does lt; stand for something like "Left tag" or is it just a code?
- javascript - Difference between lt and lt; - Stack Overflow
Difference between " lt" and "<" Asked 12 years ago Modified 12 years ago Viewed 3k times
- What is the meaning of `lt` in ` [if lt IE 9]` - Stack Overflow
What is the meaning of `lt` in ` [if lt IE 9]` Asked 8 years, 10 months ago Modified 5 years, 5 months ago Viewed 36k times
- convert lt to lt; xml document - Stack Overflow
Something like *-lt-* will probably do Have the parser produce the file save it Read in the file as plaintext, and replace your instances of *-lt-* with the regular < character Re-write the file, clobbering the version that was written by the XML parser
- python - Unable to understand __lt__ method - Stack Overflow
Swapping lt with gt reverses the order if the implementation stays the same -- that's a general property of inequalities and not specific to python Explaining point 1 in more detail, string comparison for two strings of digits of equal length checks one letter at a time if the ascii index of the digit in question is greater Ascii was designed so that this corresponds exactly to whether two
- bash - Shell equality operators (=, ==, -eq) - Stack Overflow
530 = and == are for string comparisons -eq is for numeric comparisons -eq is in the same family as -lt, -le, -gt, -ge, and -ne == is specific to bash (not present in sh (Bourne shell), ) Using POSIX = is preferred for compatibility In bash the two are equivalent, and in sh = is the only one that will work
- Replace all strings lt; and gt; in a variable with lt; and gt;
In order to make the HTML code XML-readable, I have to replace the code brackets with the corresponding symbol codes, i e < with lt; and > with gt; The formatted text gets transferred as HTML code with the variable inputtext, so we have for example the text
- What does the %lt mean in C++? (NOT modulus, I know what that does)
Because, of course, lt; is the html entity for < Finally, something somewhere decided to change the ampersands to percent signs, possibly as part of a url-encoding scheme
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