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- html - Is a replacement of ? - Stack Overflow
16 #160; is the numeric reference for the entity reference nbsp; — they are the exact same thing It's likely your editor is simply inserting the numberic reference instead of the named one See the Wikipedia page for the non-breaking space
- Whats the difference between and - Stack Overflow
The regular space has the character code 32, while the non-breaking space has the character code 160 For example when you display numbers with space as thousands separator: 1 234 567, then you use non-breaking spaces so that the number can't be split on separate lines
- Difference between breaking and non breaking space ascii characters
Having said that, the code 160 is actually outside of the range of regular (7-bit) ASCII The interpretation of 160 as a non-breaking space (or NBSP) character comes from the Latin1 (ISO8859-1) character set
- html - What is the difference between and ? - Stack Overflow
43 #160; is a non-breaking space ( nbsp;) #xa0; is just the same, but in hexadecimal (in HTML entities, the x character shows that a hexadecimal number is coming) There is basically no difference, A0 and 160 are the same numbers in a different base You should decide whether you really need a non-breaking space, or a simple space would suffice
- Are characters, such as — – § non-ascii or ascii? - Stack Overflow
I have a project where I need to "replace all non-ASCII characters (in a html) with ASCII equivalents wherever it is possible" I am just wondering: are characters in the title non-ascii or ascii?
- What does char 160 mean in my source code? - Stack Overflow
What does char 160 mean in my source code? Asked 15 years, 5 months ago Modified 1 year, 5 months ago Viewed 133k times
- Non breaking spaces (160) instead of spaces (32) in tableadapter of . . .
Non breaking spaces (160) instead of spaces (32) in tableadapter of strongly typed dataset Asked 10 years, 6 months ago Modified 10 years, 6 months ago Viewed 364 times
- what is #160; and why is it causing a weird character on my html output
#160; is the numeric version of nbsp; since you're getting  instead, you've probably got a charadter set mismatch somewhere Note that core xml doesn't undestand html entities at all, so nbsp; isn't valid xml
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