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by ClarkIsTheBest September 11, 2020

1๐Ÿ‘ 4๐Ÿ‘Ž


=0!

The face made by a hockey fan when he sees an attractive Canadian player.

=0! Sid the Kid is so dreamy! =0! I wish he was on my team! =0!

by ZakE AKA Sid lover December 16, 2010

1๐Ÿ‘ 4๐Ÿ‘Ž


#0

#0 is often used as a reference to the topic, on forums where posts in thread are numbered.
The first posts has #0, the first reply has #1 and so on.
Many forums have a "quote" function, where the actual text you want to quote on is shown.
If this is not the case, #number is used to refer to a specific post.

In some rare cases, when a posts is deleted, the numbering will automatically try to fix the order, which can be messy if a user has made a reference to a post that is deleted, and thus refering to something that doesn't make any sense.

- #0 speaks the truth!
- I agree on what #3 said, but #8 is all wrong.

by Fizk April 29, 2008

2๐Ÿ‘ 13๐Ÿ‘Ž


javascript:void(0)

What you just did. You were tired and your clumsy hand dragged one of the buttons above the Search Bar into the Search Bar. Don't worry, we've all been through this.

"- How tf does it know??"

You, right now in front of your screen after having accidentally searched for "javascript:void(0)".

by pragmatic moron June 6, 2020

119๐Ÿ‘ 3๐Ÿ‘Ž


texting $0

not having to pay to send a text message

XMPP enables the smart phone user to send messages in text at zero cost: make the parents happy, more money to spend

texting $0 = xmpp

by prosody pro February 15, 2012

252๐Ÿ‘ 15๐Ÿ‘Ž


javascript:void(0)

What you just saw when you dragged a UI element into the search bar. This happens because web developers really like to use the HTML <a> element for buttons instead of the actual <button> element. You can give the element functionality by listening for its click event and doing things then, but the <a> element is intended for creating hyperlinks and as such won't work without a set href attribute (AKA the link that you are taken to when you click on it). Therefore, you can use the void JavaScript operator, which will return the value undefined. If the browser is told to go to undefined, it will just keep the current page open. void will also evaluate its operands first, so <a href="javascript:void(alert('you clicked me'))">click me</a> would show "you clicked me" when clicked, but most people would just use javascript:void(0) and alert "you clicked me" on the click event, as said before. Urban Dictionary uses the javascript:void(0) technique for some of its UI elements, so when you just dragged the browse (or categories, or cart) button into the search bar, and I know you did, its href attribute was copied into the search bar, and now you're looking at javascript:void(0) and contemplating your life choices.

guy 1: god fucking damn it i just dragged a ui element into the search bar and searched for javascript:void(0), thats so annoying why does it even happen

guy 2: it happens because people cant use the <button> element and have to use <a> for some reason

by rtxmorshu February 2, 2021


person 0

the first one, he was killed in the war.....

person 1 "wheres person 0?"
person 3 "gone"

by jimmy_mom:D November 8, 2021