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%p Format specifier in c - Stack Overflow If this is what you are asking, %p and %Fp print out a pointer, specifically the address to which the pointer refers, and since it is printing out a part of your computer's architecture, it does so in Hexadecimal In C, you can cast between a pointer and an int, since a pointer is just a 32-bit or 64-bit number (depending on machine architecture) referring to the aforementioned chunk of memory
pointers - C++ - *p vs p vs p - Stack Overflow 5 I am still struggling to understand the difference between *p, p, and p From my understanding, * can be thought of "value pointed by", and as "adress of" In other words, * holds the value while holds the adress If this is true, then what is the distinction between *p and p? Doesn't p hold the value of something, just like *p?
c# - What does this regexp mean - \p {Lu}? - Stack Overflow These are considered Unicode properties The Unicode property \p{L} — shorthand for \p{Letter} will match any kind of letter from any language Therefore, \p{Lu} will match an uppercase letter that has a lowercase variant And, the opposite \p{Ll} will match a lowercase letter that has an uppercase variant Concisely, this would match any lowercase uppercase that has a variant from any
unix - mkdirs -p option - Stack Overflow 2 Note that -p is an argument to the mkdir command specifically, not the whole of Unix Every command can have whatever arguments it needs In this case it means "parents", meaning mkdir will create a directory and any parents that don't already exist
Why is the format of %p and %x different in a format string? No %p expects the argument to be of type (void *) and prints out the address Whereas %x converts an unsigned int to unsigned hexadecimal and prints out the result And coming to what %p does is implementation defined but the standard just says that %p expects void* argument else the behavior is undefined