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okhttp/src/commonJvmAndroid/kotlin/okhttp3/internal/-HostnamesCommon.kt
* of Android's private InetAddress#isNumeric API. * * This matches IPv6 addresses as a hex string containing at least one colon, and possibly * including dots after the first colon. It matches IPv4 addresses as strings containing only * decimal digits and dots. This pattern matches strings like "a:.23" and "54" that are neither IP
Created: Fri Apr 03 11:42:14 GMT 2026 - Last Modified: Wed Mar 19 19:25:20 GMT 2025 - 11.2K bytes - Click Count (0) -
okhttp/src/jvmTest/kotlin/okhttp3/HeadersJvmTest.kt
.add("\tkey\t:\tvalue\t") // '\t' also counts as whitespace .add("ping: pong ") // Value whitespace is trimmed. .add("kit:kat") // Space after colon is not required. .build() assertThat(headers.values("foo")).containsExactly("bar", "baz", "bak") assertThat(headers.values("key")).containsExactly("value")
Created: Fri Apr 03 11:42:14 GMT 2026 - Last Modified: Tue May 27 14:51:25 GMT 2025 - 5.7K bytes - Click Count (0) -
build-logic-commons/code-quality-rules/src/main/resources/checkstyle/checkstyle.xml
<!--<module name="WhitespaceAround">--> <!-- everything except { and } -->
Created: Wed Apr 01 11:36:16 GMT 2026 - Last Modified: Thu Dec 11 10:24:25 GMT 2025 - 6.6K bytes - Click Count (0) -
internal/handlers/proxy.go
// e.g. Forwarded: for=192.0.2.60;proto=https;by=203.0.113.43 forwarded = http.CanonicalHeaderKey("Forwarded") // Allows for a sub-match of the first value after 'for=' to the next // comma, semi-colon or space. The match is case-insensitive. forRegex = regexp.MustCompile(`(?i)(?:for=)([^(;|,| )]+)(.*)`) // Allows for a sub-match for the first instance of scheme (http|https) // prefixed by 'proto='. The match is case-insensitive.
Created: Sun Apr 05 19:28:12 GMT 2026 - Last Modified: Wed Feb 26 19:25:49 GMT 2025 - 5.4K bytes - Click Count (0) -
internal/s3select/jstream/decoder.go
// read string key if c != '"' { err = d.mkError(ErrSyntax, "looking for beginning of object key string") break } if k, err = d.string(); err != nil { break } // read colon before value if c = d.skipSpaces(); c != ':' { err = d.mkError(ErrSyntax, "after object key") break } // read value d.skipSpaces() if d.emitKV { if v, t, err = d.any(); err != nil {Created: Sun Apr 05 19:28:12 GMT 2026 - Last Modified: Fri Aug 29 02:39:48 GMT 2025 - 13.4K bytes - Click Count (0) -
fastapi/security/oauth2.py
return data ``` Note that for OAuth2 the scope `items:read` is a single scope in an opaque string. You could have custom internal logic to separate it by colon characters (`:`) or similar, and get the two parts `items` and `read`. Many applications do that to group and organize permissions, you could do it as well in your application, justCreated: Sun Apr 05 07:19:11 GMT 2026 - Last Modified: Tue Mar 24 16:32:10 GMT 2026 - 23.6K bytes - Click Count (0) -
src/test/java/org/codelibs/fess/score/ScoreUpdaterTest.java
scoreUpdater.addScoreBooster(booster1); scoreUpdater.addScoreBooster(booster2); String result = scoreUpdater.execute(); // Check format with class name, colon, count, and newline String[] lines = result.split("\n"); assertEquals(2, lines.length); assertTrue(lines[0].matches("TestScoreBooster : \\d+"));Created: Tue Mar 31 13:07:34 GMT 2026 - Last Modified: Wed Jan 14 14:29:07 GMT 2026 - 10.5K bytes - Click Count (0) -
docs/en/docs/environment-variables.md
The value of the variable `PATH` is a long string that is made of directories separated by a colon `:` on Linux and macOS, and by a semicolon `;` on Windows. For example, the `PATH` environment variable could look like this: //// tab | Linux, macOS ```plaintext /usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/sbin
Created: Sun Apr 05 07:19:11 GMT 2026 - Last Modified: Thu Mar 05 18:13:19 GMT 2026 - 7.9K bytes - Click Count (0) -
docs/de/llm-prompt.md
### List of English terms and their preferred German translations
Created: Sun Apr 05 07:19:11 GMT 2026 - Last Modified: Mon Dec 29 18:54:20 GMT 2025 - 9.8K bytes - Click Count (0) -
docs/en/docs/python-types.md
* `list` * `tuple` * `set` * `dict` #### List { #list } For example, let's define a variable to be a `list` of `str`. Declare the variable, with the same colon (`:`) syntax. As the type, put `list`. As the list is a type that contains some internal types, you put them in square brackets: {* ../../docs_src/python_types/tutorial006_py310.py hl[1] *} /// infoCreated: Sun Apr 05 07:19:11 GMT 2026 - Last Modified: Thu Mar 05 18:13:19 GMT 2026 - 11K bytes - Click Count (0)