There is no metric or calculation for a crime and the punishment it should receive. We simply draw an equals sign between the two and tinker with the punishment until it feelsequal to the crime.
It's not an equals sign like we've seen before, or a double arrow.
All attributes in alphabetical order, preceded by a single space, with no space on either side of the equals sign, and double quotes around the attribute value.
The code in Listing 4 uses the equals sign to indicate that certain characters and character groups are equivalent.
All this really does is express a syntax preference for slashes over ampersands, equals signs, and question marks.
A subtle but important difference between auth and list is that list is a closure, whereas auth is a private method. (Closures use an equals sign in the definition; methods use parentheses.)
Thesquiggly equals sign »should be read “approximately equal to.”[1] Applying this insight, we have that
Use a single space before each namespace declaration, no space on either side of the equals sign, and double quotes around the namespace URI.
So I simply have, in my small-angle approximation, t It's approximately, but I still put an equals sign there.