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- 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
- Are characters, such as — – § non-ascii or ascii? - Stack Overflow
I have a project where I need to "replace all non-ASCII characters (in a html) with ASCII equivalents wherever it is possible" I am just wondering: are characters in the title non-ascii or ascii?
- What does char 160 mean in my source code? - Stack Overflow
What does char 160 mean in my source code? Asked 15 years, 5 months ago Modified 1 year, 5 months ago Viewed 133k times
- Whats the difference between and - Stack Overflow
The regular space has the character code 32, while the non-breaking space has the character code 160 For example when you display numbers with space as thousands separator: 1 234 567, then you use non-breaking spaces so that the number can't be split on separate lines
- Non breaking spaces (160) instead of spaces (32) in tableadapter of . . .
Non breaking spaces (160) instead of spaces (32) in tableadapter of strongly typed dataset Asked 10 years, 6 months ago Modified 10 years, 6 months ago Viewed 364 times
- what is #160; and why is it causing a weird character on my html output
#160; is the numeric version of nbsp; since you're getting  instead, you've probably got a charadter set mismatch somewhere Note that core xml doesn't undestand html entities at all, so nbsp; isn't valid xml
- How do I change the size of figures drawn with Matplotlib?
Using plt rcParams There is also this workaround in case you want to change the size without using the figure environment So in case you are using plt plot() for example, you can set a tuple with width and height import matplotlib pyplot as plt plt rcParams["figure figsize"] = (20,3) This is very useful when you plot inline (e g , with IPython Notebook) As asmaier noticed, it is preferable
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