- ’ showing on page instead of - Stack Overflow
So what's the problem, It's a ’ (RIGHT SINGLE QUOTATION MARK - U+2019) character which is being decoded as CP-1252 instead of UTF-8 If you check the Encodings table of this character at FileFormat Info, then you see that this character is in UTF-8 composed of bytes 0xE2, 0x80 and 0x99 And if you check the CP-1252 code page layout at Wikipedia, then you'll see that the hex bytes E2, 80 and
- How to convert these strange characters? (ë, Ã, ì, ù, Ã)
My page often shows things like ë, Ã, ì, ù, à in place of normal characters I use utf8 for header page and MySQL encode How does this happen?
- Why does this symbol ’ show up in my email messages almost always?
why do these odd symbols appear in my emails _ you’ve Why are my emails corrupted with weird letters and symbols? Prerequisite for sending an encrypted email message
- How can I set up a virtual environment for Python in Visual Studio Code . . .
In my project folder I created a venv folder: python -m venv venv When I run command select python interpreter in Visual Studio Code, my venv folder is not shown I went one level up like suggeste
- How to concatenate (join) items in a list to a single string
For handling a few strings in separate variables, see How do I append one string to another in Python? For the opposite process - creating a list from a string - see How do I split a string into a list of characters? or How do I split a string into a list of words? as appropriate
- RegEx for matching A-Z, a-z, 0-9, _ and . - Stack Overflow
I need a regex which will allow only A-Z, a-z, 0-9, the _ character, and dot ( ) in the input I tried: [A-Za-z0-9_ ] But, it did not work How can I fix it?
- git: how to rename a branch (both local and remote)?
I have a local branch master that points to a remote branch origin regacy (oops, typo!) How do I rename the remote branch to origin legacy or origin master? I tried: git remote rename regacy legac
- a* [a asterisco], a [a prima] (variables + distintivo, matemáticas)
En matemáticas hay veces que resulta cómodo nombrar una variable, digamos "a", y luego se hace referencia a una nueva variable llamándole "a*", " a' ", o "
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