Math, asked by supriyalsood110907, 4 days ago

in what time will Rs 5000 amount to Rs 5832 at 8% rate of compound interest p.a.?

step by step solution
no scam​

Answers

Answered by hansa01071980
0

The above example shows usage of the <img> element:

The src attribute is required, and contains the path to the image you want to embed.

The alt attribute holds a text description of the image, which isn't mandatory but is incredibly useful for accessibility — screen readers read this description out to their users so they know what the image means. Alt text is also displayed on the page if the image can't be loaded for some reason: for example, network errors, content blocking, or linkrot.

There are many other attributes to achieve various purposes:

Referrer/CORS control for security and privacy: see crossorigin and referrerpolicy.

Use both width and height to set the intrinsic size of the image, allowing it to take up space before it loads, to mitigate content layout shifts.

Responsive image hints with sizes and srcset (see also the <picture> element and our Responsive images tutorial).

Supported image formats

The HTML standard doesn't list what image formats to support, so user agents may support different formats.

Note: The Image file type and format guide provides comprehensive information about image formats and their web browser support. This section is just a summary!

The image file formats that are most commonly used on the web are:

APNG (Animated Portable Network Graphics) — Good choice for lossless animation sequences (GIF is less performant)

AVIF (AV1 Image File Format) — Good choice for both images and animated images due to high performance.

GIF (Graphics Interchange Format) — Good choice for simple images and animations.

JPEG (Joint Photographic Expert Group image) — Good choice for lossy compression of still images (currently the most popular).

PNG (Portable Network Graphics) — Good choice for lossy compression of still images (slightly better quality than JPEG).

SVG (Scalable Vector Graphics) — Vector image format. Use for images that must be drawn accurately at different sizes.

WebP (Web Picture format) — Excellent choice for both images and animated images

Formats like WebP and AVIF are highly recommended as they are now broadly (and somewhat deeply) supported by web browsers, and perform much better than PNG, JPEG, GIF for both still and animated images. SVG remains the recommended format for images that must be drawn accurately at different sizes

Similar questions