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- What does 0. 0. 0. 0 0 and :: 0 mean? - Stack Overflow
0 0 0 0 means that any IP either from a local system or from anywhere on the internet can access It is everything else other than what is already specified in routing table
- What is the difference between 0. 0. 0. 0, 127. 0. 0. 1 and localhost?
The loopback adapter with IP address 127 0 0 1 from the perspective of the server process looks just like any other network adapter on the machine, so a server told to listen on 0 0 0 0 will accept connections on that interface too
- What is the difference between NULL, \0 and 0? - Stack Overflow
This 0 is then referred to as a null pointer constant The C standard defines that 0 cast to the type void * is both a null pointer and a null pointer constant Additionally, to help readability, the macro NULL is provided in the header file stddef h Depending upon your compiler it might be possible to #undef NULL and redefine it to something
- Check if bash variable equals 0 - Stack Overflow
That means bash sees an expression which says [ -eq 0 ]; then which doesn't make sense to it [[ ]] is the safer version which seems to make bash see it as [ [ null -eq 0 ]] which is correct
- What is IPV6 for localhost and 0. 0. 0. 0? - Stack Overflow
As we all know the IPv4 address for localhost is 127 0 0 1 (loopback address) What is the IPv6 address for localhost and for 0 0 0 0 as I need to block some ad hosts
- What is %0|%0 and how does it work? - Stack Overflow
What is %0|%0 and how does it work? Asked 12 years, 7 months ago Modified 7 years, 8 months ago Viewed 201k times
- Regex that accepts only numbers (0-9) and NO characters
By putting ^ at the beginning of your regex and $ at the end, you ensure that no other characters are allowed before or after your regex For example, the regex [0-9] matches the strings "9" as well as "A9B", but the regex ^[0-9]$ only matches "9"
- c - What do 0LL or 0x0UL mean? - Stack Overflow
LL designates a literal as a long long and UL designates one as unsigned long and 0x0 is hexadecimal for 0 So 0LL and 0x0UL are an equivalent number but different datatypes; the former is a long long and the latter is an unsigned long
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