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The purpose of this page is to help users of Wikipedia solve problems they may encounter when browsing or editing. Note: If you're trying to get help for a specific technical problem that isn't answered by the FAQs, try asking at Wikipedia:Troubleshooting or at the Village pump.
The second logo was used from 2015 to 2024 AliExpress self-service delivery station in Katowice, Poland, 2020 AliExpress pavilion, Moscow Leningradsky railway station, 2016. AliExpress (Chinese: 全球速卖通) is an online retail service based in China and owned by the Alibaba Group. [1]
A local shared object (LSO), commonly called a Flash cookie (due to its similarity with an HTTP cookie), is a piece of data that websites that use Adobe Flash may store on a user's computer. Local shared objects have been used by all versions of Flash Player (developed by Macromedia, which was later acquired by Adobe Systems ) since version 6.
Alibaba Group Holding Limited, branded as Alibaba (/ ˌ æ l i ˈ b ɑː b ə, ˌ ɑː-/), is a Chinese multinational technology company specializing in e-commerce, retail, Internet, and technology.
Alibaba Cloud, also known as Aliyun (Chinese: 阿里云; pinyin: Ālǐyún; lit. 'Ali Cloud'), is a cloud computing company, a subsidiary of Alibaba Group.Alibaba Cloud provides cloud computing services to online businesses and Alibaba's own e-commerce ecosystem.
The new operator can be used to create an object wrapper for a Boolean primitive. However, the typeof operator does not return boolean for the object wrapper, it returns object. Because all objects evaluate as true, a method such as .valueOf(), or .toString(), must be used to retrieve the wrapped value.
This is the style used for animating jQuery element objects when jQuery is present on the page. Animation calls in Velocity consist of supplying the desired element(s) to animate, an animation property map to specify the CSS properties to be animated, and an optional options object to specify animation settings (e.g. duration).
The HTML specification does not specify which video and audio formats browsers should support. User agents are free to support any video formats they feel are appropriate, but content authors cannot assume that any video will be accessible by all complying user agents, since user agents have no minimal set of video and audio formats to support.