Sold        Eastwind Equestrian Center



  1. Sold Leiloes
  2. Sold        East Wind Equestrian Center
  3. Sold Book
Look up sold in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.

Sold lays bare the anguish and the impact of the housing crisis as it threatens to rip the city apart. Stephen explores the role foreign investment plays in all of this and whether we have a hope. Sometimes, a webpage or HTML email may have syntax errors that cause 'nbsp' to appear. This may happen if the trailing semicolon is not added (  instead of  ). Some websites, such as discussion boards, may not support certain HTML codes, including no-break spaces. In these cases, you may see the   HTML code instead of white space.

Sold out

Sold may refer to:

Sold        Eastwind Equestrian Center
  • Sold (Boy George album), 1987
  • Sold (Died Pretty album), 1996
  • Sold (TV series), a British comedy drama television series
  • Sold (McCormick novel), a 2006 novel by Patricia McCormick and Illustrated by Bryn Barnard
  • Sold (Gullifer novel), a 2009 novel by Brendan Gullifer
  • Sold (1915 film), an American silent film directed by Edwin S. Porter
  • Sold (2014 film), a narrative feature film directed by Jeffrey D. Brown
  • 'Sold (The Grundy County Auction Incident)', a 1995 song by John Michael Montgomery
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Sold&oldid=864217392'

Answer: When browsing the web, you may occasionally run into pages with   somewhere in the text. You may even see multiple &nbsp's grouped together. This looks pretty odd, but there is a good explanation for it.

EastwindSong

NBSP stands for 'No-Break SPace.' It is similar to a standard space character, but it prevents line breaks, or newlines from being processed between words or other elements. Typically, a string of text will wrap at the last space before the end of a line. A no-break space is treated as a standard character, so the text will not wrap wherever one is inserted.

No-break (or 'non-breaking') spaces are also used to display multiple consecutive spaces on a webpage. In HTML, the language used to create webpages, a single space is processed the same as two, ten, or one hundred consecutive spaces. So if you want to put more than one space between words or other elements on a webpage, you need to use a no-break space.

HTML Example

The HTML code for a no-break space is   (HTML codes for special characters begin with an ampersand and end with a semicolon) . So to make 'this phrase' turn into 'this phrase,' no-break spaces must be inserted between 'this' and 'phrase' in the HTML, as in the example below:

Cost of goods sold

<p>this&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;phrase</p>

Sold Leiloes

Sometimes, a webpage or HTML email may have syntax errors that cause 'nbsp' to appear. This may happen if the trailing semicolon is not added (&nbsp instead of &nbsp;). Some websites, such as discussion boards, may not support certain HTML codes, including no-break spaces. In these cases, you may see the &nbsp; HTML code instead of white space.

Sold        East Wind Equestrian Center

Entered: August 18, 2005 — Updated: July 25, 2020 – by Per Christensson

Sold Book

Category: Web