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If you are using more than one drop down list on the same page this parameter is very important. The Id parameter for each list should be different and unique (if using more than one on the same page). Hence the for example {{Drop down list|Name=text1|id=IdName1|Value1=a|Value2=b|Value3=c}}
The symbols ′ and ″ seen in edit window dropdowns are prime and double prime: these are used to designate units of angular measurement, and not as apostrophes or quote marks. Quotation marks and apostrophes in imported material should be changed if necessary to comply with the above.
New components (TimeLine, InputNumber, KeyFilter, ImportEnum, ImportConstants, Knob, Repeat), new theme called Omega, new CSS grid, accessibility enhancements and many features for existing components. PrimeFaces 6.1 2017-04-19
The indented syntax of Less is a nested metalanguage, as valid CSS is valid Less code with the same semantics. Less provides the following mechanisms: variables, nesting, mixins, operators and functions; the main difference between Less and other CSS precompilers is that Less allows real-time compilation via less.js by the browser. [2] [4]
The multiplicity of a prime factor p of n is the largest exponent m for which p m divides n. The tables show the multiplicity for each prime factor. If no exponent is written then the multiplicity is 1 (since p = p 1). The multiplicity of a prime which does not divide n may be called 0 or may be considered undefined.
A "citation needed" tag is a request for another editor to supply a source for the tagged fact: a form of communication between members of a collaborative editing community.
The prime number theorem is obtained there in an equivalent form that the Cesàro sum of the values of the Liouville function is zero. The Liouville function is ( − 1 ) ω ( n ) {\displaystyle (-1)^{\omega (n)}} where ω ( n ) {\displaystyle \omega (n)} is the number of prime factors, with multiplicity, of the integer n {\displaystyle n} .
E-Prime (short for English-Prime or English Prime, [1] sometimes É or E′) denotes a restricted form of English in which authors avoid all forms of the verb to be.. E-Prime excludes forms such as be, being, been, present tense forms (am, is, are), past tense forms (was, were) along with their negative contractions (isn't, aren't, wasn't, weren't), and nonstandard contractions such as ain't ...