browsers are made for the easy access of world wide website.so it display the same webpage by both ways.
This is the whole idea of HTTP, we don't easily as humans remember a sequence of numbers, for our most used sites, and it makes for poor memorability. IP addresses came first, and are the way of computers understanding addresses for websites, you may see Google.com (Or whatever example) but your browser translates this into something it can understand e.g. an IP address. by putting in an IP you basically just bypass the translation usually done whenever you go to a web address.
IF WS-AGE NUMERIC DISPLAY "NUMERIC" ELSE DISPLAY "NOT NUMERIC' END-IF
Source MAC address
Destination MAC address
No, the variables do not form part of the URL visible in the address bar. They only display in GET methods or manually appended.To access POST variables in scripts, you need to use $_POST['variable_name'];
The basic idea is as follows. Assume an array n(), of ten elements.* Set variable "highest" to the first number, n(1). * Set index "i" equal to 2. * Do the following in a loop: * If n(i) is greater than "highest", replace "highest" with n(i). * Increment i by 1. * Compare whether "i" is greater than 10. If it is, leave the loop. * Display variable "highest".
Yes. I am not sure whether it is assigned already... but it is a legal address.Yes. I am not sure whether it is assigned already... but it is a legal address.Yes. I am not sure whether it is assigned already... but it is a legal address.Yes. I am not sure whether it is assigned already... but it is a legal address.
The time is still 2:25, whether the display is digital or analogue!
The bank where the account was opened. Typically the bank address on the check.
Because it just checks if the wrong data has been entered in the wrong field.
yes
Whether there are spelling errors