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forms - What is amp used for - Stack Overflow So you should be replacing your ampersands with amp; when writing a URL in your markup Note that replacing with amp; is only done when writing the URL in HTML, where " " is a special character (along with "<" and ">")
Whats the difference between and amp; in HTML5? In HTML5, they are equivalent in that example Traditionally, in HTML, only amp; was correct — but as with so many things, web developers blithely ignored this inconvenient rule and wrote bare ampersands everywhere For their part, browsers just "did the right thing" and interpreted these ampersands as ampersands HTML5 standardized this behavior, so now is allowed by itself as long as
Do I really need to encode as - Stack Overflow Encoding as amp; under all circumstances, for me, is an easier rule to live by, reducing the likelihood of errors and failures Compare the following: which is easier? Which is easier to bugger up? Methodology 1 Write some content which includes ampersand characters Encode them all Methodology 2 (with a grain of salt, please ;) )
How do I escape ampersands in XML so they are rendered as entities in . . . How do I escape this ampersand in the source XML? I tried amp;, but this is decoded as the actual ampersand character ( ), which is invalid in HTML So I want to escape it in such a way that it will be rendered as amp; in the web page that uses the XML output
URL encode sees “ ” (ampersand) as “ amp;” HTML entity amp; is the proper way to escape the ampersand in an HTML context where is your source coming from? and what's the destination? It may be better to do this server-side for example
javascript - Why should I use instead of ? - Stack Overflow 15 why should I use amp; instead of when writing HTML for my site? Where can I find a list of other symbols that I should be encoding? (the bar too, right?) What problems could I have if I paste the symbol right as it is into the html?
url - Encoding of XHTML and (ampersand) - Stack Overflow My website is XHTML Transitional compliant except for one thing: the amp; (ampersand) in the URL are written as it is, instead of amp;amp; That is, all the URLs in my pages are usually like this: