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How to change the output color of echo in Linux
I am trying to print a text in the terminal using echo command.
30 Answers
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Is it better to call ToList() or ToArray() in LINQ queries?
I often run into the case where I want to eval a query right where I declare it. This is usually because I need to iterate over it multiple times and it is expensive to compute. For example:
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How to check if all elements of a list matches a condition?
I have a list consisting of like 20000 lists. I use each list's 3rd element as a flag. I want to do some operations on this list as long as at least one element's flag is 0, it's like:
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What is the difference between 127.0.0.1 and localhost
Assuming the following is defined in .../hosts :
6 Answers
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What are the main uses of yield(), and how does it differ from join() and interrupt()?
I am a little bit confused about the use of yield() method in Java, specifically in the example code below. I've also read that yield() is 'used to prevent execution of a thread'.
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Applying a function to every row of a table using dplyr?
When working with plyr I often found it useful to use adply for scalar functions that I have to apply to each and every row.
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Custom numeric format string to always display the sign
Is there any way I can specify a standard or custom numeric format string to always output the sign, be it +ve or -ve (although what it should do for zero, I'm not sure!)
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What is the maximum length of latitude and longitude? [closed]
How long can latitude and longitude be?
7 Answers
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What is the difference between 0.0.0.0, 127.0.0.1 and localhost?
I am using Jekyll and Vagrant on my mac. I found that Jekyll server will bind to 0.0.0.0:4000 instead of 127.0.0.1:4000 . Also gem server will bind to this address by default. I can still visit it via http://localhost:port . But for Jekyll , it seems that the default setting (e.g. 0.0....
What is the >>>= operator in C?
Given by a colleague as a puzzle, I cannot figure out how this C program actually compiles and runs. What is this >>>= operator and the strange 1P1 literal? I have tested in Clang and GCC. There are no warnings and the output is "???"
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