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html - What do lt; and gt; stand for? - Stack Overflow I know that the entities lt; and gt; are used for < and >, but I am curious what these names stand for Does lt; stand for something like "Left tag" or is it just a code?
html - What character encoding is gt;? - Stack Overflow This might answer your question Basically it is HTML encoding for a few predefined characters Characters like gt; and amp; are HTML Entities specifically, they are Named HTML Entities
HTML: Should I encode greater than or not? ( gt; gt; ) authors should use " gt; " (ASCII decimal 62) in text instead of ">" so I believe you should encode the greater > sign as gt; (because you should obey the standards)
writing lt; and gt; to a xml file instead of lt; and gt; in java 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 > symbols , and after marshalling through jaxb the xml which gets created has ;lt; and ;gt; instead of the < and > symbols i tried using escape characters and ascii 60 and
ios - String Comparison: what does gt mean - Stack Overflow In HTML if you write gt; the browser will show > This is good for preventing users from inserting their own HTML in something like a chat room Or displaying HTML tags, without them actually be interpreted as HTML tags by the browser Wherever you copied your code may have mistakenly outputted amp;gt; amp; is the HTML representation of So the HTML representation of "greater than" ( gt
What is the gt for here? if [ $VARIABLE -gt 0 ]; then -gt is an arithmetic test that denotes greater than Your condition checks if the variable CATEGORIZE is greater than zero Quoting from help test (the [ is a command known as test; help is a shell builtin that provides help on shell builtins):
bash - Shell equality operators (=, ==, -eq) - Stack Overflow 530 = and == are for string comparisons -eq is for numeric comparisons -eq is in the same family as -lt, -le, -gt, -ge, and -ne == is specific to bash (not present in sh (Bourne shell), ) Using POSIX = is preferred for compatibility In bash the two are equivalent, and in sh = is the only one that will work
What does -gt operator mean in Bash programming? Except that > is different from -gt In the test [ command, > is the greater-than operator for strings; -gt is for integers And of course in most other contexts > is for output redirection
bash - [: -gt: unary operator expected - Stack Overflow I don't write a lot of Bash, so I'm a bit stumped as to how to fix this I need to check whether a value returned from a command is greater than x When it runs though I get [: -gt: unary operator