- Sort Score
- Result 10 results
- Languages All
Results 1 - 10 of 13 for amp (0.05 sec)
-
src/main/webapp/WEB-INF/view/admin/searchlog/admin_searchlog_details.jsp
Registered: Sat Dec 20 09:19:18 UTC 2025 - Last Modified: Thu Nov 13 05:54:52 UTC 2025 - 10K bytes - Viewed (0) -
guava-tests/test/com/google/common/html/HtmlEscapersTest.java
assertEquals("test & test & test", htmlEscaper().escape("test & test & test")); assertEquals("test << 1", htmlEscaper().escape("test << 1")); assertEquals("test >> 1", htmlEscaper().escape("test >> 1")); assertEquals("<tab>", htmlEscaper().escape("<tab>")); // Test simple escape of '&'. assertEquals("foo&bar", htmlEscaper().escape("foo&bar"));
Registered: Fri Dec 26 12:43:10 UTC 2025 - Last Modified: Fri Dec 05 22:03:28 UTC 2025 - 2.3K bytes - Viewed (0) -
guava-tests/test/com/google/common/xml/XmlEscapersTest.java
CharEscaper xmlEscaper, boolean shouldEscapeQuotes, boolean shouldEscapeWhitespaceChars) { // Simple examples (smoke tests) assertEquals("xxx", xmlEscaper.escape("xxx")); assertEquals("test & test & test", xmlEscaper.escape("test & test & test")); assertEquals("test << 1", xmlEscaper.escape("test << 1")); assertEquals("test >> 1", xmlEscaper.escape("test >> 1"));Registered: Fri Dec 26 12:43:10 UTC 2025 - Last Modified: Fri Dec 05 22:03:28 UTC 2025 - 4.8K bytes - Viewed (0) -
android/guava-tests/test/com/google/common/html/HtmlEscapersTest.java
assertEquals("test & test & test", htmlEscaper().escape("test & test & test")); assertEquals("test << 1", htmlEscaper().escape("test << 1")); assertEquals("test >> 1", htmlEscaper().escape("test >> 1")); assertEquals("<tab>", htmlEscaper().escape("<tab>")); // Test simple escape of '&'. assertEquals("foo&bar", htmlEscaper().escape("foo&bar"));
Registered: Fri Dec 26 12:43:10 UTC 2025 - Last Modified: Fri Dec 05 22:03:28 UTC 2025 - 2.3K bytes - Viewed (0) -
fess-crawler/src/main/java/org/codelibs/fess/crawler/util/XmlUtil.java
* XML entities. This method replaces the following characters: * <ul> * <li>& with &amp;</li> * <li>< with &lt;</li> * <li>> with &gt;</li> * <li>" with &quot;</li> * <li>' with &apos;</li> * </ul> * Additionally, it strips invalid XML characters from the input string. *Registered: Sat Dec 20 11:21:39 UTC 2025 - Last Modified: Sat Nov 22 13:28:22 UTC 2025 - 9.5K bytes - Viewed (0) -
src/main/webapp/WEB-INF/view/admin/searchlist/admin_searchlist.jsp
<la:link href="/admin/searchlist/edit?crudMode=2&doc.doc_id=${f:u(doc.doc_id)}&q=${f:u(q)}" styleClass="btn btn-primary btn-xs">Registered: Sat Dec 20 09:19:18 UTC 2025 - Last Modified: Thu Nov 13 05:54:52 UTC 2025 - 20.1K bytes - Viewed (0) -
fess-crawler/src/main/java/org/codelibs/fess/crawler/util/CharUtil.java
* * Valid URL characters include: * - Lowercase letters (a-z) * - Uppercase letters (A-Z) * - Digits (0-9) * - Special characters: . - * _ : / + % = & ? # [ ] @ ~ ! $ ' ( ) , ; * * @param c the character to check * @return {@code true} if the character is a valid URL character, {@code false} otherwise */ public static boolean isUrlChar(final char c) {Registered: Sat Dec 20 11:21:39 UTC 2025 - Last Modified: Sat Nov 22 13:28:22 UTC 2025 - 1.8K bytes - Viewed (1) -
doc/go_spec.html
</p> <pre class="grammar"> + & += &= && == != ( ) - | -= |= || < <= [ ] * ^ *= ^= <- > >= { } / << /= <<= ++ = := , ; % >> %= >>= -- ! ... . : &^ &^= ~ </pre>
Registered: Tue Dec 30 11:13:12 UTC 2025 - Last Modified: Tue Dec 02 23:07:19 UTC 2025 - 286.5K bytes - Viewed (1) -
fess-crawler/src/test/java/org/codelibs/fess/crawler/util/XmlUtilTest.java
} public void test_escapeXml_allSpecialChars() { // Test all special characters String input = "Test & < > \"quote\" 'apos'"; String expected = "Test & < > "quote" 'apos'"; assertEquals(expected, XmlUtil.escapeXml(input)); } public void test_escapeXml_noSpecialChars() { // Test string without special charactersRegistered: Sat Dec 20 11:21:39 UTC 2025 - Last Modified: Mon Nov 24 03:59:47 UTC 2025 - 8.3K bytes - Viewed (0) -
doc/asm.html
One is in constant evaluation. Constant expressions in the assembler are parsed using Go's operator precedence, not the C-like precedence of the original. Thus <code>3&1<<2</code> is 4, not 0—it parses as <code>(3&1)<<2</code> not <code>3&(1<<2)</code>. Also, constants are always evaluated as 64-bit unsigned integers. Thus <code>-2</code> is not the integer value minus two,
Registered: Tue Dec 30 11:13:12 UTC 2025 - Last Modified: Fri Nov 14 19:09:46 UTC 2025 - 36.5K bytes - Viewed (0)