r/linuxquestions on Reddit: What does "%s" mean
The action group is a group named Desktop Action %s, where %s is the action identifier.
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i believe that might be from the Desktop Entry Specification: https://specifications.freedesktop.org/desktop-entry-spec/desktop-entry-spec-latest.html#extra-actions-identifier Action identifier Each action is identified by a string, following the same format as key names (see the section called “Entries”). Each identifier is associated with an action group that must be present in the .desktop file. The action group is a group named Desktop Action %s, where %s is the action identifier. It is not valid to have an action group for an action identifier not mentioned in the Actions key. Such an action group must be ignored by implementors.
The action group is a group named Desktop Action %s, where %s is the action identifier.
In some code that I have to maintain, I have seen a format specifier %*s . Can anybody tell me what this is and why it is used? An example of its usage is like: fprintf(outFile, "\n%*s", indent, ...
The % operator is deprecated in favor of the more powerful str.format method, see PEP-3101.
I'm looking at the following code I found in libgksu and I'm wondering what the %s inside the string does. I'm unable to use Google for this since it strips away characters such as the percentile d...
It's worth mentioning that the likely purpose of this code, especially when used with %s, is to print a sub-string of the original string. In this use case, str would point to somewhere inside the original string (possibly at the beginning), and str_len will specify the length of the sub-string that should be printed.
%s in a quick searchbox is used for customisation for web browsers such as Opera, Chromium and Firefox, After the URL of the (empty) target site searchbox add %s so that the term in the browser searchbox is transferred into the site searchbox
From a Q&A Thread I've came to meet with some old things, but I'm afraid, I found myself in a condition that, I still don't know the meaning of them and don't know why to use them. %1$s - (foun...
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The "%" operator is used to format a set of variables enclosed in a "tuple" (a fixed size list), together with a format string, which contains normal text together with "argument specifiers", special symbols like "%s" and "%d".
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Ancient Greek did not have a /ʃ/ "sh" phoneme, so the derived Greek letter Sigma (Σ) came to represent the voiceless alveolar sibilant /s/. While the letter shape Σ continues Phoenician šîn, its name sigma is taken from the letter Samekh, while the shape and position of samekh but name of šîn is continued in the xi.
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James's car) and s' if I don't (e.g., the guys' bets).
From the Etruscan letter 𐌔 (s, “es”), from the Ancient Greek letter Σ (S, “sigma”), derived from the Phoenician letter 𐤔 (š, “šin”), from the Egyptian hieroglyph 𓌒.
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I’ve noticed that sometimes people will add “/s” to the end of their sentence. What does it mean?
%s has 0 definitions.
106 votes, 48 comments. I see it everywhere. And I know the /* means the end of something, but what does the s stand for? Sarcasm? Smellz?
The Chicago Manual of Style (the most popular style guide for books in the US) adds an apostrophe and an ”s“ to singular nouns; so they would go with “Chris’s”.