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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
windows - What does p mean in set p? - Stack Overflow What does p stand for in set p=? I know that enables a switch, and I'm fairly sure that I know a is for arithmetic I've heard numerous rumours, some saying p is for prompt, others stating it
html - When to use lt;span gt; instead lt;p gt;? - Stack Overflow The <p> tag is a p aragraph, 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 Inline elements deal with spans of text inside a paragraph They typically
unix - mkdirs -p option - Stack Overflow I'm confused about what the -p option does in Unix I used it for a lab assignment while creating a subdirectory and then another subdirectory within that one It looked like this: mkdir -p cmps012m lab1 This is in a private directory with normal rights (rlidwka) Oh, and would someone mind giving a little explanation of what rlidwka means?
What is the difference between lt;p gt;, lt;div gt; and lt;span gt; in HTML XHTML? p and div elements are block level elements where span is an inline element and hence margin on span wont work Alternatively you can make your span a block level element by using CSS display: block; or for span I would prefer display: inline-block; Apart from that, these elements have specific semantic meaning, div is better referred for a block of content having different nested elements, p
c - why is *pp [0] equal to **pp - Stack Overflow So pp [0] points to the address of p, which is 0x2000, and by dereferencing I would expect to get the contents of address 0x2000 That's were your reasoning strays, but understandably so In C, the right hand side of an assignment, or generally an evaluation of an lvalue (vulgo: variable), more precisely an lvalue-to-rvalue conversion, is already a dereferencing! For example, int i, j=0; i=j