/external/chromium_org/chrome/browser/resources/history/ |
history.js | 419 * timeframe (day or week) based containers. 432 WEEK: 1, 582 * query 'window' |range| days behind. As such for range set to WEEK an offset 777 $('timeframe-filter-week').addEventListener('change', handleRangeChange); [all...] |
/libcore/luni/src/main/java/java/text/ |
SimpleDateFormat.java | 70 * <tr> <td>{@code E}</td> <td>day of week</td> <td>(Text)</td> <td>{@code E}/{@code EE}/{@code EEE}:Tue, {@code EEEE}:Tuesday, {@code EEEEE}:T</td> </tr> 71 * <tr> <td>{@code F}</td> <td>day of week in month</td> <td>(Number)</td> <td>2 <i>(2nd Wed in July)</i></td> </tr> 78 * <tr> <td>{@code W}</td> <td>week in month</td> <td>(Number)</td> <td>2</td> </tr> 81 * <tr> <td>{@code c}</td> <td>stand-alone day of week</td> <td>(Text)</td> <td>{@code c}/{@code cc}/{@code ccc}:Tue, {@code cccc}:Tuesday, {@code ccccc}:T</td> </tr> 87 * <tr> <td>{@code w}</td> <td>week in year</td> <td>(Number)</td> <td>27</td> </tr> [all...] |
/external/icu4c/test/testdata/ |
structLocale.txt | [all...] |
/external/chromium_org/third_party/icu/source/tools/tzcode/ |
zic.c | 1977 register int week; local [all...] |
/external/icu4c/tools/tzcode/ |
zic.c | 1977 register int week; local [all...] |
/external/chromium_org/chrome/third_party/chromevox/_locales/en/ |
messages.json | [all...] |
/external/chromium_org/chrome/third_party/chromevox/_locales/en_GB/ |
messages.json | [all...] |
/external/chromium_org/chrome/third_party/chromevox/_locales/nl/ |
messages.json | [all...] |
/external/chromium_org/third_party/WebKit/PerformanceTests/Layout/ |
chapter-reflow-once.html | 31 <p><span>What struck me instantly as the hall-marks of the German publication were its treatment of the war as an exclusively Russian-provoked Russo-German affair and its brazenly</span> <em class="italics">ex-parté</em> <span>character--how</span> <em class="italics">ex-parté</em> <span>I did not fully realize till I read England's White Paper a week later. Sir Edward Grey laid his cards on the table, without marginal notes or comment of any kind, and asked the world to pass judgment. Doctor von Bethmann Hollweg's White Paper began with a lengthy plea of justification and ended with quotation of such communications between the Kaiser's Government and its ambassadors and between the German Emperor and the Czar as would most plausibly support the Fatherland's case for war. It was manifestly a biased and incomplete record. It was in fact a doctored record, and suggested that its authors had Bismarck's mutilation of the Ems telegram in mind as a precedent, in emulation of which no German Government could possibly go wrong.</span></p> 45 <p><span>On the day before the war session of the Reichstag, the Kaiser, more conscious than ever now of his partnership with Deity, ordained Wednesday, August 5, as a day of universal prayer for the success of German arms. Soon after its proclamation, William II, thunderously acclaimed, appeared in</span> <em class="italics">Unter den Linden</em><span>intermittently, en route to conference with high officers of state. He was clad, like every German soldier one now saw, in field-gray, and ready, one heard, to leave for the front at a moment's notice, to take up his post, assigned him by Hohenzollern warrior traditions, on the battlefield in the midst of his loyal legions. Mobilization was now in full swing, and more and more troops were in evidence, crossing town to railway stations from which they were to be transported east or west, as the Staff's emergencies required. A week before, all these soldiers were in Prussian blue. They were gray now, from head to foot, millions of them. Obviously the clothing department of the army had not been taken by "surprise" by the cruel war "forced" on pacific Germany. Three million uniforms can not be turned out in a whole summer--even in Germany. I thought of this, as gray streams, far into the evening, kept pouring through Berlin, and I thought what a marvelously happy selection that peculiar shade of drab-gray, of almost dust-like invisibility from afar, was for field purposes. To shoot at lines no more colorful than that, it seemed to me, would be like banging away at the horizon itself....</span></p> 47 <p><span>History, I suppose, will date Armageddon from August 1, when the German army and navy were mobilized, or perhaps from August 2, when Germany claims that Russia and France fired the first miscreant shots. But the red-letter day of the World Massacre's opening week was beyond all question Tuesday, August 4, which began with the war sitting of the Reichstag and ended with England's declaration of war on Germany. It was destined to be especially big with import for me--of vital import, as events hanging over my unsuspecting head were speedily to reveal.</span></p>
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chapter-reflow-thrice.html | 31 <p><span>What struck me instantly as the hall-marks of the German publication were its treatment of the war as an exclusively Russian-provoked Russo-German affair and its brazenly</span> <em class="italics">ex-parté</em> <span>character--how</span> <em class="italics">ex-parté</em> <span>I did not fully realize till I read England's White Paper a week later. Sir Edward Grey laid his cards on the table, without marginal notes or comment of any kind, and asked the world to pass judgment. Doctor von Bethmann Hollweg's White Paper began with a lengthy plea of justification and ended with quotation of such communications between the Kaiser's Government and its ambassadors and between the German Emperor and the Czar as would most plausibly support the Fatherland's case for war. It was manifestly a biased and incomplete record. It was in fact a doctored record, and suggested that its authors had Bismarck's mutilation of the Ems telegram in mind as a precedent, in emulation of which no German Government could possibly go wrong.</span></p> 45 <p><span>On the day before the war session of the Reichstag, the Kaiser, more conscious than ever now of his partnership with Deity, ordained Wednesday, August 5, as a day of universal prayer for the success of German arms. Soon after its proclamation, William II, thunderously acclaimed, appeared in</span> <em class="italics">Unter den Linden</em><span>intermittently, en route to conference with high officers of state. He was clad, like every German soldier one now saw, in field-gray, and ready, one heard, to leave for the front at a moment's notice, to take up his post, assigned him by Hohenzollern warrior traditions, on the battlefield in the midst of his loyal legions. Mobilization was now in full swing, and more and more troops were in evidence, crossing town to railway stations from which they were to be transported east or west, as the Staff's emergencies required. A week before, all these soldiers were in Prussian blue. They were gray now, from head to foot, millions of them. Obviously the clothing department of the army had not been taken by "surprise" by the cruel war "forced" on pacific Germany. Three million uniforms can not be turned out in a whole summer--even in Germany. I thought of this, as gray streams, far into the evening, kept pouring through Berlin, and I thought what a marvelously happy selection that peculiar shade of drab-gray, of almost dust-like invisibility from afar, was for field purposes. To shoot at lines no more colorful than that, it seemed to me, would be like banging away at the horizon itself....</span></p> 47 <p><span>History, I suppose, will date Armageddon from August 1, when the German army and navy were mobilized, or perhaps from August 2, when Germany claims that Russia and France fired the first miscreant shots. But the red-letter day of the World Massacre's opening week was beyond all question Tuesday, August 4, which began with the war sitting of the Reichstag and ended with England's declaration of war on Germany. It was destined to be especially big with import for me--of vital import, as events hanging over my unsuspecting head were speedily to reveal.</span></p>
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chapter-reflow-twice.html | 31 <p><span>What struck me instantly as the hall-marks of the German publication were its treatment of the war as an exclusively Russian-provoked Russo-German affair and its brazenly</span> <em class="italics">ex-parté</em> <span>character--how</span> <em class="italics">ex-parté</em> <span>I did not fully realize till I read England's White Paper a week later. Sir Edward Grey laid his cards on the table, without marginal notes or comment of any kind, and asked the world to pass judgment. Doctor von Bethmann Hollweg's White Paper began with a lengthy plea of justification and ended with quotation of such communications between the Kaiser's Government and its ambassadors and between the German Emperor and the Czar as would most plausibly support the Fatherland's case for war. It was manifestly a biased and incomplete record. It was in fact a doctored record, and suggested that its authors had Bismarck's mutilation of the Ems telegram in mind as a precedent, in emulation of which no German Government could possibly go wrong.</span></p> 45 <p><span>On the day before the war session of the Reichstag, the Kaiser, more conscious than ever now of his partnership with Deity, ordained Wednesday, August 5, as a day of universal prayer for the success of German arms. Soon after its proclamation, William II, thunderously acclaimed, appeared in</span> <em class="italics">Unter den Linden</em><span>intermittently, en route to conference with high officers of state. He was clad, like every German soldier one now saw, in field-gray, and ready, one heard, to leave for the front at a moment's notice, to take up his post, assigned him by Hohenzollern warrior traditions, on the battlefield in the midst of his loyal legions. Mobilization was now in full swing, and more and more troops were in evidence, crossing town to railway stations from which they were to be transported east or west, as the Staff's emergencies required. A week before, all these soldiers were in Prussian blue. They were gray now, from head to foot, millions of them. Obviously the clothing department of the army had not been taken by "surprise" by the cruel war "forced" on pacific Germany. Three million uniforms can not be turned out in a whole summer--even in Germany. I thought of this, as gray streams, far into the evening, kept pouring through Berlin, and I thought what a marvelously happy selection that peculiar shade of drab-gray, of almost dust-like invisibility from afar, was for field purposes. To shoot at lines no more colorful than that, it seemed to me, would be like banging away at the horizon itself....</span></p> 47 <p><span>History, I suppose, will date Armageddon from August 1, when the German army and navy were mobilized, or perhaps from August 2, when Germany claims that Russia and France fired the first miscreant shots. But the red-letter day of the World Massacre's opening week was beyond all question Tuesday, August 4, which began with the war sitting of the Reichstag and ended with England's declaration of war on Germany. It was destined to be especially big with import for me--of vital import, as events hanging over my unsuspecting head were speedily to reveal.</span></p>
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chapter-reflow.html | 31 <p><span>What struck me instantly as the hall-marks of the German publication were its treatment of the war as an exclusively Russian-provoked Russo-German affair and its brazenly</span> <em class="italics">ex-parté</em> <span>character--how</span> <em class="italics">ex-parté</em> <span>I did not fully realize till I read England's White Paper a week later. Sir Edward Grey laid his cards on the table, without marginal notes or comment of any kind, and asked the world to pass judgment. Doctor von Bethmann Hollweg's White Paper began with a lengthy plea of justification and ended with quotation of such communications between the Kaiser's Government and its ambassadors and between the German Emperor and the Czar as would most plausibly support the Fatherland's case for war. It was manifestly a biased and incomplete record. It was in fact a doctored record, and suggested that its authors had Bismarck's mutilation of the Ems telegram in mind as a precedent, in emulation of which no German Government could possibly go wrong.</span></p> 45 <p><span>On the day before the war session of the Reichstag, the Kaiser, more conscious than ever now of his partnership with Deity, ordained Wednesday, August 5, as a day of universal prayer for the success of German arms. Soon after its proclamation, William II, thunderously acclaimed, appeared in</span> <em class="italics">Unter den Linden</em><span>intermittently, en route to conference with high officers of state. He was clad, like every German soldier one now saw, in field-gray, and ready, one heard, to leave for the front at a moment's notice, to take up his post, assigned him by Hohenzollern warrior traditions, on the battlefield in the midst of his loyal legions. Mobilization was now in full swing, and more and more troops were in evidence, crossing town to railway stations from which they were to be transported east or west, as the Staff's emergencies required. A week before, all these soldiers were in Prussian blue. They were gray now, from head to foot, millions of them. Obviously the clothing department of the army had not been taken by "surprise" by the cruel war "forced" on pacific Germany. Three million uniforms can not be turned out in a whole summer--even in Germany. I thought of this, as gray streams, far into the evening, kept pouring through Berlin, and I thought what a marvelously happy selection that peculiar shade of drab-gray, of almost dust-like invisibility from afar, was for field purposes. To shoot at lines no more colorful than that, it seemed to me, would be like banging away at the horizon itself....</span></p> 47 <p><span>History, I suppose, will date Armageddon from August 1, when the German army and navy were mobilized, or perhaps from August 2, when Germany claims that Russia and France fired the first miscreant shots. But the red-letter day of the World Massacre's opening week was beyond all question Tuesday, August 4, which began with the war sitting of the Reichstag and ended with England's declaration of war on Germany. It was destined to be especially big with import for me--of vital import, as events hanging over my unsuspecting head were speedily to reveal.</span></p>
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/external/icu4c/i18n/unicode/ |
udat.h | 35 * week, or even the calendar format: lunar vs. solar. [all...] |
/external/iproute2/examples/ |
cbq.init-v0.7.3 | 67 # - support for week days in TIME rules 418 # You can also specify days of week when the TIME rule applies. <dow> 886 ### Check the day-of-week (if present) [all...] |
/build/ |
CleanSpec.mk | 33 # that you made last week required touching a file and a change you
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/external/bison/ |
TODO | 302 X-Sent: 1 week, 4 days, 14 hours, 38 minutes, 11 seconds ago
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/external/chromium_org/chrome/browser/autocomplete/ |
shortcuts_provider.cc | 410 // Then we decay this by half each week.
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/external/chromium_org/chrome/browser/history/ |
history_database.cc | 159 // week and last month.
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visitsegment_database.cc | 437 // Today gets 3x, a week ago 2x, three weeks ago 1.5x, falling off to 1x
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/external/chromium_org/chrome/browser/resources/web_dev_style/ |
css_checker.py | 171 'datetime-edit-week-field',
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/external/chromium_org/chrome/third_party/chromevox/extensions/searchvox/ |
results.js | 165 var FORE_INTRO = 'Forecasts for this week';
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/external/chromium_org/content/browser/accessibility/ |
browser_accessibility_android.cc | 461 else if (type == "week")
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/external/chromium_org/native_client_sdk/src/doc/ |
overview.rst | 257 Chrome is released on a six week cycle, and developer versions of Chrome are
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/external/chromium_org/rlz/lib/ |
rlz_lib.h | 221 // Also, if there are no events, the call will succeed only once a week.
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/external/chromium_org/third_party/WebKit/PerformanceTests/Dromaeo/resources/dromaeo/web/tests/ |
sunspider-date-format-xparb.html | 305 // Skip to Thursday of this week
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