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Adobe Exam AD0-E720 Topic 3 Question 17 Discussion

Actual exam question for Adobe's AD0-E720 exam
Question #: 17
Topic #: 3
[All AD0-E720 Questions]

What is the difference between styles-l.less and styles-m.less ?

Show Suggested Answer Hide Answer
Suggested Answer: A, C

To apply a knockout binding to a

to run a function, onClick(), when it's clicked, the developer can use either of the following solutions:

A)

: This solution will use the click binding to execute the onClick() function as an expression when the
is clicked. The function will be called with the current binding context as the first parameter and the event object as the second parameter.

C)

: This solution will use the click binding to execute the onClick function as a reference when the
is clicked. The function will be called with the current binding context as the first parameter and the event object as the second parameter.

The following solutions are not valid and will not work:

B)

<!-- ko click: 'onClick' --><!-- /ko -->
: This solution will use the virtual element syntax to apply the click binding, but it will pass a string literal instead of a function expression or reference. This will cause an error, as the click binding expects a function value.

D)

: This solution will use a custom attribute instead of a data-bind attribute to apply the click binding. This is not supported by knockout and will not have any effect.


Contribute your Thoughts:

Lore
1 months ago
Okay, let me think this through. If 'l' stands for 'large', then 'styles-l.less' must be for the desktop version. And 'm' must be for 'medium', so 'styles-m.less' is for mobile. I'll go with A.
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Vashti
1 months ago
Haha, the naming conventions in this question remind me of my high school gym classes - 'small', 'medium', and 'large' never made much sense to me either!
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Ressie
5 days ago
Haha, I never understood the naming conventions either!
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Kanisha
12 days ago
C) styles-i.less is used to generate desktop-specific styles and stytes-m.less is used to generate basic and mobile-specific styles.
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Glory
16 days ago
A) styles-i.less is used to generate basic and mobile-specific styles and stytes-m.less is used to generate desktop-specific styles.
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Franklyn
17 days ago
A) styles-i.less is used to generate basic and mobile-specific styles and stytes-m.less is used to generate desktop-specific styles.
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Arlene
2 months ago
I'm a bit confused about the naming convention here. Shouldn't it be 'styles-s.less' for mobile and 'styles-l.less' for desktop?
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Thurman
1 months ago
C) styles-i.less is used to generate desktop-specific styles and stytes-m.less is used to generate basic and mobile-specific styles.
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Gearldine
1 months ago
B) styles-i.less is used to generate desktop-specific styles and stytes-m.less is used to generate only mobile-specific styles.
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Junita
1 months ago
A) styles-i.less is used to generate basic and mobile-specific styles and stytes-m.less is used to generate desktop-specific styles.
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Han
2 months ago
I think the correct answer is A. The question clearly states that styles-l.less is for mobile-specific styles and styles-m.less is for desktop-specific styles.
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Jesusa
2 months ago
So, styles-i.less is for desktop and styles-m.less is for mobile. Got it.
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Francesco
2 months ago
I believe styles-m.less is for mobile-specific styles.
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Jesusa
3 months ago
I think the difference is that styles-i.less is for desktop-specific styles.
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