No. HTML tags are not case sensitive. However, he standard approach by designers now, is to type them in lower case.
HTML in not case sensitive i.e. upper and lowercase does not matter. For example: <body> tag and <BODY> tag are the same.
Yes xml is case sensitive, this includes enumerations which are also case sensitive.
HTML is not case-sensitive, while C is a case-sensitive language. In HTML, the tags, attributes, and values can be written in uppercase or lowercase letters, and it will still be interpreted the same way by the web browser. For example, the "p" tag can be written as or , and both will be interpreted as paragraph tags. On the other hand, C is a case-sensitive language, which means that the identifiers such as variables, function names, and keywords must be written in the correct case. For example, "main" is different from "Main" and "MAIN" in C. It's important to keep in mind the case sensitivity rules while coding in these languages to avoid syntax errors or unexpected behavior.
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Both. "Case sensitive" means that upper case and lower case characters are treated as different characters.
Yes. C and C++ are case sensitive, although, depending on implementation, external symbols might not be case sensitive.
Something is case sensitive when it requires proper capitalization and lower case letters as well as numbers. Case sensitive passwords will not work if you forget to make sure the proper letters in words used for password are capitalized. An example of a case sensitive word would be WikiAnswers.
Yes they are case sensitive.. :-)
If you want to maintain W3C compliance, you can't use the FORM tag without the BODY tag. The FORM tag must be contained within the BODY tag. Like this <html> <head> <title>Our Cool Form Page</title> </head> <body> <form method="post" action="example.php"> <input type="submit" value="submit"> </form> </body> </html>
A URL is case sensitive. An email address is not. If you had an address of AbCd, the email provider will automatically switch it to abcd, even if you type it as AbCd. (In years past, email addresses were all case sensitive. But not now.) Passwords though are all CaSe SenSitIve.
No.
No.