Julia 1.11.4
are related to strings in two ways: the obvious connection is that regular expressions are used to find regular patterns in strings; the other connection is that regular expressions are themselves input sockets is subtle and has to do with the accept and connect methods. The accept method retrieves a connection to the client that is connecting on the server we just created, while the connect function connects you should be able to pass the same arguments to connect as you did to listen to establish the connection. So let's try that out (after having created the server above): julia> connect(2000) TCPSocket(open0 码力 | 2007 页 | 6.73 MB | 3 月前3Julia 1.11.5 Documentation
are related to strings in two ways: the obvious connection is that regular expressions are used to find regular patterns in strings; the other connection is that regular expressions are themselves input sockets is subtle and has to do with the accept and connect methods. The accept method retrieves a connection to the client that is connecting on the server we just created, while the connect function connects you should be able to pass the same arguments to connect as you did to listen to establish the connection. So let's try that out (after having created the server above): julia> connect(2000) TCPSocket(open0 码力 | 2007 页 | 6.73 MB | 3 月前3Julia 1.11.6 Release Notes
are related to strings in two ways: the obvious connection is that regular expressions are used to find regular patterns in strings; the other connection is that regular expressions are themselves input sockets is subtle and has to do with the accept and connect methods. The accept method retrieves a connection to the client that is connecting on the server we just created, while the connect function connects you should be able to pass the same arguments to connect as you did to listen to establish the connection. So let's try that out (after having created the server above): julia> connect(2000) TCPSocket(open0 码力 | 2007 页 | 6.73 MB | 3 月前3Julia 1.12.0 RC1
are related to strings in two ways: the obvious connection is that regular expressions are used to find regular patterns in strings; the other connection is that regular expressions are themselves input sockets is subtle and has to do with the accept and connect methods. The accept method retrieves a connection to the client that is connecting on the server we just created, while the connect function connects you should be able to pass the same arguments to connect as you did to listen to establish the connection. So let's try that out (after having created the server above): julia> connect(2000) TCPSocket(open0 码力 | 2057 页 | 7.44 MB | 3 月前3Julia 1.12.0 Beta4
are related to strings in two ways: the obvious connection is that regular expressions are used to find regular patterns in strings; the other connection is that regular expressions are themselves input sockets is subtle and has to do with the accept and connect methods. The accept method retrieves a connection to the client that is connecting on the server we just created, while the connect function connects you should be able to pass the same arguments to connect as you did to listen to establish the connection. So let's try that out (after having created the server above): julia> connect(2000) TCPSocket(open0 码力 | 2057 页 | 7.44 MB | 3 月前3Julia 1.12.0 Beta3
are related to strings in two ways: the obvious connection is that regular expressions are used to find regular patterns in strings; the other connection is that regular expressions are themselves input sockets is subtle and has to do with the accept and connect methods. The accept method retrieves a connection to the client that is connecting on the server we just created, while the connect function connects you should be able to pass the same arguments to connect as you did to listen to establish the connection. So let's try that out (after having created the server above): julia> connect(2000) TCPSocket(open0 码力 | 2057 页 | 7.44 MB | 3 月前3julia 1.12.0 beta1
are related to strings in two ways: the obvious connection is that regular expressions are used to find regular patterns in strings; the other connection is that regular expressions are themselves input sockets is subtle and has to do with the accept and connect methods. The accept method retrieves a connection to the client that is connecting on the server we just created, while the connect function connects you should be able to pass the same arguments to connect as you did to listen to establish the connection. So let's try that out (after having created the server above): julia> connect(2000) TCPSocket(open0 码力 | 2047 页 | 7.41 MB | 3 月前3julia 1.13.0 DEV
are related to strings in two ways: the obvious connection is that regular expressions are used to find regular patterns in strings; the other connection is that regular expressions are themselves input sockets is subtle and has to do with the accept and connect methods. The accept method retrieves a connection to the client that is connecting on the server we just created, while the connect function connects you should be able to pass the same arguments to connect as you did to listen to establish the connection. So let's try that out (after having created the server above): julia> connect(2000) TCPSocket(open0 码力 | 2058 页 | 7.45 MB | 3 月前3julia 1.10.10
in two ways:CHAPTER 7. STRINGS 59 the obvious connection is that regular expressions are used to find regular patterns in strings; the other connection is that regular expressions are themselves input sockets is subtle and has to do with the accept and connect methods. The accept method retrieves a connection to the client that is connecting on the server we just created, while the connect function connects you should be able to pass the same arguments to connect as you did to listen to establish the connection. So let's try that out (after having created the server above): julia> connect(2000) TCPSocket(open0 码力 | 1692 页 | 6.34 MB | 3 月前3Julia 1.10.9
in two ways:CHAPTER 7. STRINGS 59 the obvious connection is that regular expressions are used to find regular patterns in strings; the other connection is that regular expressions are themselves input sockets is subtle and has to do with the accept and connect methods. The accept method retrieves a connection to the client that is connecting on the server we just created, while the connect function connects you should be able to pass the same arguments to connect as you did to listen to establish the connection. So let's try that out (after having created the server above): julia> connect(2000) TCPSocket(open0 码力 | 1692 页 | 6.34 MB | 3 月前3
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