Learn when to use <p> for paragraphs and <br> for line breaks in html on stack overflow. What is the difference between <p> and <div> Can they be used interchangeably Asked 11 years, 1 month ago modified 10 years ago viewed 27k times The <p> tag is a p aragraph, and as such, it is a block element (as is, for instance, h1 and div), whereas span is an inline element (as, for instance, b and a) block elements by default create some whitespace above and below themselves, and nothing can be aligned next to them, unless you set a float attribute to them Inline elements deal with spans of text inside a paragraph
What does /p stand for in set /p= I know that / enables a switch, and i'm fairly sure that i know /a is for arithmetic I've heard numerous rumours, some saying /p is for prompt, others stating it I used it for a lab assignment while creating a subdirectory and then another subdirectory within that one Oh, and would someone mind giving a little explanation of what rlidwka means? What do <o:p> elements do anyway
%p will also use an adequate textural representation for pointer for the platform On platforms where it is common to represent pointer in hex, this won't make a difference as long as the size is correct but for a segmented architecture (do you remember dos?) it may use a segment:offset representation. I would say the second one, than the <p> is not inheriting attributes of <a> and keeping it's original formatting.
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