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html - When to use lt;p gt; vs. lt;br gt; - Stack Overflow 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 Use it when you
html - When to use lt;span gt; instead lt;p gt;? - Stack Overflow The <p> tag is a paragraph, 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
c - Why is *p++ different from *p += 1? - Stack Overflow Let's start with *p += 1 I will try to answer this from a bit of a different angle Step 1 Let's look at the operators and the operands: In this case it is one operand (the pointer p), and we have two operators, in this case * for dereferencing and += 1 for increment Step 2 which has the higher precedence * has higher precedence over +=
Whats P=NP?, and why is it such a famous question? P stands for polynomial time NP stands for non-deterministic polynomial time Definitions: Polynomial time means that the complexity of the algorithm is O(n^k), where n is the size of your data (e g number of elements in a list to be sorted), and k is a constant
What is the difference between images in P and L mode in PIL? If you have a P mode image, that means it is palettised That means there is a palette with up to 256 different colours in it, and instead of storing 3 bytes for R, G and B for each pixel, you store 1 byte which is the index into the palette This confers both advantages and disadvantages
html - What do lt;o:p gt; elements do anyway? - Stack Overflow For your specific question the o in the <o:p> means "Office namespace" so anything following the o: in a tag means "I'm part of Office namespace" - in case of <o:p> it just means paragraph, the equivalent of the ordinary <p> tag I assume that every HTML tag has its Office "equivalent" and they have more