| /external/testng/src/main/java/org/testng/internal/junit/ |
| D | ArrayAsserts.java | 5 * Asserts that two object arrays are equal. If they are not, an 8 * they are considered equal. 26 * Asserts that two object arrays are equal. If they are not, an 28 * <code>actual</code> are <code>null</code>, they are considered 43 * Asserts that two byte arrays are equal. If they are not, an 60 * Asserts that two byte arrays are equal. If they are not, an 73 * Asserts that two char arrays are equal. If they are not, an 90 * Asserts that two char arrays are equal. If they are not, an 103 * Asserts that two short arrays are equal. If they are not, an 120 * Asserts that two short arrays are equal. If they are not, an [all …]
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| /external/junit/src/main/java/org/junit/ |
| D | Assert.java | 12 * <code>Assert.assertEquals(...)</code>, however, they read better if they 99 * Asserts that two objects are equal. If they are not, an 102 * they are considered equal. 135 * Asserts that two objects are equal. If they are not, an 138 * they are considered equal. 148 * Asserts that two objects are <b>not</b> equals. If they are, an 151 * they are considered equal. 166 * Asserts that two objects are <b>not</b> equals. If they are, an 169 * they are considered equal. 189 * Asserts that two longs are <b>not</b> equals. If they are, an [all …]
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| /external/guava/guava-tests/test/com/google/common/io/testdata/ |
| D | alice_in_wonderland.txt | 9 works old enough that they have passed into the public domain. 55 noticed that they were filled with cupboards and book-shelves; 64 shall think nothing of tumbling down stairs! How brave they'll 79 or Longitude either, but thought they were nice grand words to 96 should think!' (Dinah was the cat.) `I hope they'll remember 122 There were doors all round the hall, but they were all locked; 163 things, all because they WOULD not remember the simple rules 256 feet, they seemed to be almost out of sight, they were getting so 261 kind to them,' thought Alice, `or perhaps they won't walk the 266 `They must go by the carrier,' she thought; `and how funny it'll [all …]
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| /external/brotli/tests/testdata/ |
| D | alice29.txt | 57 noticed that they were filled with cupboards and book-shelves; 66 shall think nothing of tumbling down stairs! How brave they'll 81 or Longitude either, but thought they were nice grand words to 98 should think!' (Dinah was the cat.) `I hope they'll remember 124 There were doors all round the hall, but they were all locked; 165 things, all because they WOULD not remember the simple rules 258 feet, they seemed to be almost out of sight, they were getting so 263 kind to them,' thought Alice, `or perhaps they won't walk the 268 `They must go by the carrier,' she thought; `and how funny it'll 334 strange, and the words did not come the same as they used to do:-- [all …]
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| D | plrabn12.txt | 26 many times to get them into their current condition. They have 51 punctuation marks, etc., since they were not available keyboard 145 Oh how unlike the place from whence they fell! 344 If once they hear that voice, their liveliest pledge 348 Their surest signal--they will soon resume 349 New courage and revive, though now they lie 378 While with perfidious hatred they pursued 401 They heard, and were abashed, and up they sprung 403 On duty, sleeping found by whom they dread, 405 Nor did they not perceive the evil plight [all …]
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| /external/testng/src/main/java/org/testng/ |
| D | Assert.java | 105 * Asserts that two objects are equal. If they are not, 173 * Asserts that two objects are equal. If they are not, 183 * Asserts that two Strings are equal. If they are not, 194 * Asserts that two Strings are equal. If they are not, 204 * Asserts that two doubles are equal concerning a delta. If they are not, 231 * Asserts that two doubles are equal concerning a delta. If they are not, 243 * Asserts that two floats are equal concerning a delta. If they are not, 265 * Asserts that two floats are equal concerning a delta. If they are not, 277 * Asserts that two longs are equal. If they are not, 288 * Asserts that two longs are equal. If they are not, [all …]
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| D | AssertJUnit.java | 70 * Asserts that two objects are equal. If they are not 84 * Asserts that two objects are equal. If they are not 112 * Asserts that two doubles are equal concerning a delta. If they are not 139 * Asserts that two floats are equal concerning a delta. If they are not 166 * Asserts that two longs are equal. If they are not 181 * Asserts that two booleans are equal. If they are not 196 * Asserts that two bytes are equal. If they are not 211 * Asserts that two chars are equal. If they are not 226 * Asserts that two shorts are equal. If they are not 241 * Asserts that two ints are equal. If they are not [all …]
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| /external/junit/src/main/java/junit/framework/ |
| D | Assert.java | 68 * Asserts that two objects are equal. If they are not 82 * Asserts that two objects are equal. If they are not 111 * Asserts that two doubles are equal concerning a delta. If they are not 133 * Asserts that two floats are equal concerning a positive delta. If they 155 * Asserts that two longs are equal. If they are not 170 * Asserts that two booleans are equal. If they are not 185 * Asserts that two bytes are equal. If they are not 200 * Asserts that two chars are equal. If they are not 215 * Asserts that two shorts are equal. If they are not 230 * Asserts that two ints are equal. If they are not [all …]
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| D | TestCase.java | 239 * Asserts that two objects are equal. If they are not 248 * Asserts that two objects are equal. If they are not 273 * Asserts that two doubles are equal concerning a delta. If they are not 292 * Asserts that two floats are equal concerning a positive delta. If they 311 * Asserts that two longs are equal. If they are not 328 * Asserts that two booleans are equal. If they are not 345 * Asserts that two bytes are equal. If they are not 362 * Asserts that two chars are equal. If they are not 379 * Asserts that two shorts are equal. If they are not 396 * Asserts that two ints are equal. If they are not [all …]
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| /external/python/google-api-python-client/docs/dyn/ |
| D | spanner_v1.projects.instances.databases.sessions.html | 147 # particular, read-only transactions do not take locks, so they do 149 # taking locks, they also do not abort, so retry loops are not needed. 151 # Transactions may only read/write data in a single database. They 214 # seconds. Idle transactions can be aborted by Cloud Spanner so that they 228 # Snapshot transactions do not take locks. Instead, they work by 230 # timestamp. Since they do not acquire locks, they do not block 234 # transactions never abort. They can fail if the chosen read 255 # or read-write transaction, because they are able to execute far 280 # prefix of the global transaction history: they observe 283 # transactions with a larger commit timestamp. They will block until [all …]
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| /external/python/cpython3/Tools/c-globals/ |
| D | README | 26 of values that are constantly shifting in a complex way. When they are 28 involves. Furthermore, when they are spread out it complicates efforts 33 should be added for runtime state. Instead, they should be added to 39 If it reports any globals then they should be resolved. If the globals 40 are runtime state then they should be folded into _PyRuntimeState. 41 Otherwise they should be added to ignored-globals.txt.
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| /external/swiftshader/third_party/llvm-7.0/llvm/lib/DebugInfo/PDB/Native/ |
| D | DbiModuleList.cpp | 36 // If they're compatible, and they're both ends, then they're equal. in operator ==() 40 // If one is an end and the other is not, they're not equal. in operator ==() 45 // - They're compatible in operator ==() 46 // - They're not *both* end iterators in operator ==() 48 // Thus, they're compatible iterators pointing to a valid file on the same in operator ==() 64 // account for this, early-out if they're equal. in operator <() 76 // If they're both end iterators, the distance is 0. in operator -() 158 // is valid, so they are compatible if and only if they refer to the same in isCompatible()
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| /external/swiftshader/docs/ |
| D | Reactor.md | 33 …itions. For example when sorting two numbers it is faster to swap them if they are not yet in orde… 37 …they can spend on compiling the bytecode into machine code. This limits their ability to even reac… 39 …mpiled routines, unless through the API, and they have very different execution models. In other w… 41 …they are now just as programmable as CPUs but you can still only command them through an API. Atte… 48 …t run-time. Their generation happens in C++, and after materializing them they can be called durin… 59 The braces are superfluous. They just make the syntax look more like regular C++, and they offer a … 76 Note that ```Function<>``` objects are relatively heavyweight, since they have the entire JIT-compi… 112 …everal vector types. For example ```Float4``` is a vector of four floats. They support a select nu… 266 Note that this example uses regular C++ ```if``` and ```else``` constructs. They only determine whi…
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| /external/tensorflow/tensorflow/python/keras/utils/ |
| D | kernelized_utils.py | 65 where the norm is the l2-norm. x, y can be either vectors or matrices. If they 66 are vectors, they must have the same dimension. If they are matrices, they 95 where the norm is the l1-norm. x, y can be either vectors or matrices. If they 96 are vectors, they must have the same dimension. If they are matrices, they
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| /external/llvm/test/CodeGen/Mips/ |
| D | fabs.ll | 2 ; They obey the Has2008 and ABS2008 configuration bits which govern the 4 ; present, they confirm to 1985. 5 ; In 1985 mode, abs.[ds] are arithmetic (i.e. they raise invalid operation 6 ; exceptions when given NaN's). In 2008 mode, they are non-arithmetic (i.e. 7 ; they are copies and don't raise any exceptions).
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| D | fneg.ll | 2 ; They obey the Has2008 and ABS2008 configuration bits which govern the 4 ; present, they confirm to 1985. 5 ; In 1985 mode, abs.[ds] are arithmetic (i.e. they raise invalid operation 6 ; exceptions when given NaN's). In 2008 mode, they are non-arithmetic (i.e. 7 ; they are copies and don't raise any exceptions).
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| /external/swiftshader/third_party/llvm-7.0/llvm/test/CodeGen/Mips/ |
| D | fabs.ll | 2 ; They obey the Has2008 and ABS2008 configuration bits which govern the 4 ; present, they confirm to 1985. 5 ; In 1985 mode, abs.[ds] are arithmetic (i.e. they raise invalid operation 6 ; exceptions when given NaN's). In 2008 mode, they are non-arithmetic (i.e. 7 ; they are copies and don't raise any exceptions).
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| D | fneg.ll | 2 ; They obey the Has2008 and ABS2008 configuration bits which govern the 4 ; present, they confirm to 1985. 5 ; In 1985 mode, abs.[ds] are arithmetic (i.e. they raise invalid operation 6 ; exceptions when given NaN's). In 2008 mode, they are non-arithmetic (i.e. 7 ; they are copies and don't raise any exceptions).
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| /external/googletest/googlemock/docs/ |
| D | DesignDoc.md | 218 action a lot. While the other approaches require more work, they give 221 messages that pay off in the long run. They also allow overloading 231 C++0x will support lambdas, but they are not part of C++ right now. 233 try to alleviate this problem. However, they are not a good choice 236 …* They are non-standard and not widely installed. Google Mock only depends on standard libraries … 237 * They are not trivial to learn. 238 …* They will become obsolete when C++0x's lambda feature is widely supported. We don't want to mak… 239 …* Since they are based on operators, they are rather ad hoc: you cannot use statements, and you ca… 240 …* They have subtle semantics that easily confuses new users. For example, in expression `_1++ + f… 259 C++0x will also support lambda expressions. When they become
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| /external/swiftshader/third_party/SPIRV-Tools/ |
| D | projects.md | 31 They manage the creation and movement of cards 33 * They create cards to capture ideas, or to decompose large ideas into smaller 35 * They determine if the work for a card has been completed. 36 * Normally they are the person (or persons) who can approve and merge a pull 58 * We keep rejected ideas so they are not proposed again. This serves 79 Move those Issues into the `Ready to start` column when they become unblocked.
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| /external/deqp-deps/SPIRV-Tools/ |
| D | projects.md | 31 They manage the creation and movement of cards 33 * They create cards to capture ideas, or to decompose large ideas into smaller 35 * They determine if the work for a card has been completed. 36 * Normally they are the person (or persons) who can approve and merge a pull 58 * We keep rejected ideas so they are not proposed again. This serves 79 Move those Issues into the `Ready to start` column when they become unblocked.
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| /external/clang/docs/ |
| D | ClangTools.rst | 39 used by C++ developers. That is they are *not* primarily for use by 40 Clang developers, although they are hopefully useful to C++ developers 42 functionality. They are developed in three components: the underlying 58 find good APIs for libraries as they are lifted out of a few tools and 63 of Clang itself. They are entirely within the Clang *project*, 101 they'll be tracked here. The focus of this documentation is on the scope 151 that don't want to use ``auto`` because they are afraid that they might lose
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| /external/python/cpython2/Demo/metaclasses/ |
| D | meta-vladimir.txt | 60 The objects, 'a' and 'b', are of type <instance> and they both have 68 they are an instance of. This property is named __class__. 125 They say, that the Real-World bugs them with problems that cannot be 131 Hence, what they want is the following: 133 a) leave objects as they are (instances of classes) 134 b) leave classes as they are (property packages and object creators) 143 You may ask: "Why on earth do they want to do that?". 144 They answer: "Poor soul... Go and see how cruel the Real-World is!". 192 The metaclass-instances, A and B, are of type <class> and they both 201 they are an instance of. This property is named __metaclass__.
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| /external/toybox/www/doc/ |
| D | mount.txt | 19 there's more than one -o argument on the mount command line, they get glued 25 scenes they all get appended to the -o string and fed to a common parser. 67 think of when they mount things. The name means that the "backing store" 83 A lot of server backed filesystems want to open their own connection so they 95 Conceptually they're char device backed filesystems (analogus to the block 109 entries.) They grow and shrink dynamically, as needed: when you write files 110 into them they allocate more memory to store it, and when you delete files 135 These filesystems don't have any backing store either, because they don't 138 Instead they present artificial contents, which can represent processes or
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| /external/autotest/client/common_lib/ |
| D | barrier.py | 28 socket (if they were going to listen on the same port). 77 set accepts connections from each member of the set. As they arrive 78 they indicate the barrier they are joining and their identifier (their 79 hostname or IP address and optional tag). They are then asked to wait. 83 everyone they may continue via a rlse message. 86 connects will fail. Client will retry until they either succeed in 108 implicitly deemed satisifed, they have all acknowledged their presence. 149 (packets still in transit for the previous barrier they may 219 # they are coming to the same meeting. Also, everyone 253 # They seem to be valid record them. [all …]
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