- Sort Score
- Num 10 results
- Language All
Results 61 - 70 of 264 for typical (0.07 seconds)
The search processing time has exceeded the limit. The displayed results may be partial.
-
CREDITS
into a dwelling. In determining whether a product is a consumer product, doubtful cases shall be resolved in favor of coverage. For a particular product received by a particular user, "normally used" refers to a typical or common use of that class of product, regardless of the status of the particular user or of the way in which the particular user actually uses, or expects or is expected to use, the product. A product
Created: Sun Apr 05 19:28:12 GMT 2026 - Last Modified: Thu Mar 13 05:29:51 GMT 2025 - 1.8M bytes - Click Count (0) -
docs/compression/README.md
Write throughput is typically at least 500MB/s per CPU core, and scales with the number of available CPU cores. Decompression speed is typically at least 1GB/s. This means that in cases where raw IO is below these numbers compression will not only reduce disk usage but also help increase system throughput. Typically, enabling compression on spinning disk systems
Created: Sun Apr 05 19:28:12 GMT 2026 - Last Modified: Tue Aug 12 18:20:36 GMT 2025 - 5.2K bytes - Click Count (0) -
android/guava/src/com/google/common/base/NullnessCasts.java
* typically useful for {@code return} statements. That leaves the code with two options: Either * add the suppression to the whole method (which turns off checking for a large section of code), * or extract a variable, and put the suppression on that. However, a local variable typically * doesn't work: Because nullness analyses typically infer the nullness of local variables,Created: Fri Apr 03 12:43:13 GMT 2026 - Last Modified: Wed Aug 13 20:49:47 GMT 2025 - 3.3K bytes - Click Count (0) -
guava/src/com/google/common/base/NullnessCasts.java
* typically useful for {@code return} statements. That leaves the code with two options: Either * add the suppression to the whole method (which turns off checking for a large section of code), * or extract a variable, and put the suppression on that. However, a local variable typically * doesn't work: Because nullness analyses typically infer the nullness of local variables,Created: Fri Apr 03 12:43:13 GMT 2026 - Last Modified: Wed Aug 13 20:49:47 GMT 2025 - 3.3K bytes - Click Count (0) -
android/guava/src/com/google/common/collect/SneakyThrows.java
* {@code throws} clause: Some such methods can in fact throw a checked exception (e.g., by * calling code written in Kotlin).) Typically, we want to let a {@link Throwable} from such a * method propagate untouched, just as we'd typically let it do for a non-reflective call. * However, we can't usually write {@code throw t;} when {@code t} has a static type of {@linkCreated: Fri Apr 03 12:43:13 GMT 2026 - Last Modified: Mon Dec 30 18:44:22 GMT 2024 - 2.4K bytes - Click Count (0) -
android/guava/src/com/google/common/util/concurrent/SneakyThrows.java
* {@code throws} clause: Some such methods can in fact throw a checked exception (e.g., by * calling code written in Kotlin).) Typically, we want to let a {@link Throwable} from such a * method propagate untouched, just as we'd typically let it do for a non-reflective call. * However, we can't usually write {@code throw t;} when {@code t} has a static type of {@linkCreated: Fri Apr 03 12:43:13 GMT 2026 - Last Modified: Mon Dec 30 18:44:22 GMT 2024 - 2.4K bytes - Click Count (0) -
android/guava/src/com/google/common/util/concurrent/NullnessCasts.java
* typically useful for {@code return} statements. That leaves the code with two options: Either * add the suppression to the whole method (which turns off checking for a large section of code), * or extract a variable, and put the suppression on that. However, a local variable typically * doesn't work: Because nullness analyses typically infer the nullness of local variables,Created: Fri Apr 03 12:43:13 GMT 2026 - Last Modified: Wed Aug 13 20:49:47 GMT 2025 - 4K bytes - Click Count (0) -
android/guava/src/com/google/common/base/SneakyThrows.java
* {@code throws} clause: Some such methods can in fact throw a checked exception (e.g., by * calling code written in Kotlin).) Typically, we want to let a {@link Throwable} from such a * method propagate untouched, just as we'd typically let it do for a non-reflective call. * However, we can't usually write {@code throw t;} when {@code t} has a static type of {@linkCreated: Fri Apr 03 12:43:13 GMT 2026 - Last Modified: Mon Feb 03 21:52:39 GMT 2025 - 2.4K bytes - Click Count (0) -
guava/src/com/google/common/base/Functions.java
* * <p>As discussed above, prefer to use the method reference {@code Object::toString} instead, * though note that it is not serializable unless you explicitly make it {@link Serializable}, * typically by writing {@code (Function<Object, String> & Serializable) Object::toString}. * * <p>For more important information about the transition from Guava's {@link Function} class toCreated: Fri Apr 03 12:43:13 GMT 2026 - Last Modified: Wed Aug 06 17:32:30 GMT 2025 - 15.4K bytes - Click Count (0) -
android/guava/src/com/google/common/base/Functions.java
* * <p>As discussed above, prefer to use the method reference {@code Object::toString} instead, * though note that it is not serializable unless you explicitly make it {@link Serializable}, * typically by writing {@code (Function<Object, String> & Serializable) Object::toString}. * * <p>For more important information about the transition from Guava's {@link Function} class toCreated: Fri Apr 03 12:43:13 GMT 2026 - Last Modified: Wed Aug 06 17:32:30 GMT 2025 - 15.4K bytes - Click Count (0)