Possible Duplicate:
What's the shebang (#!) in Facebook and new Twitter URLs for?
It usually comes straight after the domain name.
I see it all the time, like in Twitter and Facebook urls.
Is it some special sort of routing?
Speaking of the meaning of the song, Vegard characterizes it as coming from "a genuine wonder of what the fox says, because we didn't know". Although interpreted by some commentators as a reference to the furry fandom, the brothers have stated they did not know about its existence when producing "The Fox".
The most commonly heard red fox vocalizations are a quick series of barks, and a scream-y variation on a howl. All fox vocalizations are higher-pitched than dog vocalizations, partly because foxes are much smaller. The barks are a sort of ow-wow-wow-wow, but very high-pitched, almost yippy.
Ask Google Assistant to name a song On your phone, touch and hold the Home button or say "Hey Google." Ask "What's this song?" Play a song or hum, whistle, or sing the melody of a song. Hum, whistle, or sing: Google Assistant will identify potential matches for the song.
#
is the fragment separator. Everything before it is handled by the server, and everything after it is handled by the client, usually in JavaScript (although it will advance the page to an anchor with the same name as the fragment).
after #
is the hash of the location; the !
the follows is used by search engines to help index ajax content. After that can be anything, but is usually rendered to look as a path (hence the /
). If you want to know more, read this.
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