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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)
ios - String Comparison: what does gt mean - Stack Overflow gt; is the HTML escape sequence for > Sometimes characters are converted to their escaped format to make sure text doesn't appear as HTML, usually they'll show up as the actual characters, but sometimes they don't This means that there's probably a few other escaped characters in the code, here is a list of commonly escaped characters and what they are escaped to
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 lt; and > symbols as part of value of a tag i am setting them in a string that has some text along with lt; and > symbols , and af
HTML editing: Alternative of entering lt; and gt; Most of the text editors, even Notepad comes with a Find and Replace option, paste your code in there, and use the Find and Replace option to change all the < into lt; and > into gt;
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
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