Technically, ASCII Decimal 10 is a ASCII (decimal) 10 is a linefeed character, or Vertical tab. ASCII Decimal 13 is a carriage return.
If you happen to be using a very old teletype Machine, a ASCII 10 will move you down 1 line, but leave you the same distance from the left margin. ASCII 13 would send you to the left margin, but leave you in the same line.
In modern practice, either 10 or 13, or both, will place your cursor on the first character of the next line.
Note that some operating systems vary in this. This is why when you open a UNIX text document in a Windows Notepad, the document is a single line with boxes where the ASCII(13)s are, since Notepad only accepts ASCII(10) for line return.
There are 10 millimetres in one centimetre. Therefore, the difference between 13 millimetres and one centimetre is equal to 13 - 10 = 3 millimetres.
13 Celsius degrees - NOT to be confused with 13 degrees Celsius.
13
10 and 13 have a difference of 3 and a product of 130. 13 - 10 = 3 13 x 10 = 130
The difference between 13 and 16 is 3. To find the difference between two numbers subtract the larger number by the smaller number. (16-13=3)
13
2 x 3 x 5 x 7 = 210 11 + 13 + 17 + 19 = 60 The difference is 150 .
ASCII (decimal) 10 is a linefeed character. text editors often use both a carriage return character (13) and a line feed character (10) when starting a new line. the same logic a typewriter uses where you have to return the carriage (which moves the paper over) and then feed the paper upwards.
Both are 13.
14
Difference between Ecuador and Philippines is 13 hours.
13 -3 = 10