
html - What do < and > stand for? - Stack Overflow
Feb 21, 2011 · I know that the entities < and > are used for < and >, but I am curious what these names stand for. Does < stand for something like "Left tag" or is it just a code?
html - What character encoding is >? - Stack Overflow
May 5, 2015 · In HTML, you can write the greater than sign ">" as > and the less than symbol "<" as <. Is this encoding defined by the HTML encoding or some standard like ISO, UTF …
Which characters need to be escaped in HTML? - Stack Overflow
Sep 12, 2011 · 531 Short answer If you're putting the text in a safe location in a document that uses a fully-Unicode-compatible text encoding like UTF-8, HTML only requires the same five …
writing "<" and ">" to a xml file instead of < and > in java
Jul 23, 2014 · i have to write a few lines to a xml file which should contain < and > symbols as part of value of a tag. i am setting them in a string that has some text along with < and > …
javascript - Difference between "<" and "<" - Stack Overflow
Oct 25, 2013 · Difference between "<" and "<" Asked 12 years ago Modified 12 years ago Viewed 3k times
python - Unable to understand __lt__ method - Stack Overflow
Jul 30, 2020 · Swapping lt with gt reverses the order if the implementation stays the same -- that's a general property of inequalities and not specific to python. Explaining point 1 in more detail, …
What is the meaning of `lt` in ` [if lt IE 9]` - Stack Overflow
Jan 3, 2017 · What is the meaning of `lt` in ` [if lt IE 9]` Asked 8 years, 10 months ago Modified 5 years, 5 months ago Viewed 36k times
convert < to < xml document - Stack Overflow
Mar 8, 2010 · Something like *-lt-* will probably do. Have the parser produce the file & save it. Read in the file as plaintext, and replace your instances of *-lt-* with the regular < character. …
What does the '%lt' mean in C++? (NOT modulus, I know what …
Apr 8, 2010 · Because, of course, < is the html entity for <. Finally, something somewhere decided to change the ampersands to percent signs, possibly as part of a url-encoding scheme.
bash - Shell equality operators (=, ==, -eq) - Stack Overflow
It depends on the Test Construct around the operator. Your options are double parentheses, double brackets, single brackets, or test. If you use ((…)), you are testing arithmetic equality …