The other common form of company in Italy was società a responsabilità limitata (S.r.l.) (literally: limited liability company). S.p.A. issued shares (Italian: azioni), while S.r.l. was a listing/shares of the share capital. In addition, the articles of association of S.r.l. allowed for a different distribution of profits and assets, which is more comparable to a limited partnership. [1] Presents only definitions of information technology (show all 239 definitions) Since 2016, banks are required to operate as S.p.A. if their assets exceed a defined threshold. [2] This saw the blue chips of the FTSE MIB index: Banco BPM, BPER Banca, UBI Banca, demutualized by the legal forms S.c.p.a., S.c.
a.r.l. or S.c. (respectively cooperative by shares, cooperative limited liability and cooperative). SPAs use HTML5 and Ajax (asynchronous JavaScript and XML) to provide smooth and dynamic responses to user requests so that content can be updated immediately when a user performs an action. Once the page loads, interactions with the server occur via Ajax calls and data is returned, usually in JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) format, to refresh the page without needing to reload it. Società per azioni (S.p.A. or Spa) is a form of company in Italy that means “company with shares” (although often translated as “joint-stock company”, which may or may not be a limited liability company). It is more or less equivalent to S.A. or joint-stock company (Plc) in other countries.
SP-SMO – Sp. – SP1 – SP2 – SP3 – SPA1 – SPA2 – SPA3 – SPAA – SPAAD A single-page application (SPA) is a web application that is presented to the user via a single HTML page to be more responsive and replicate a desktop application or a native application more precisely. A SPA is sometimes referred to as a single-page interface (SPI). A single-page app can retrieve all of the app`s HTML, JavaScript, and CSS when it first loads, or dynamically load resources to update them in response to user interaction or other events. Other web applications, on the other hand, present the user with an initial page linked to parts of the application on separate HTML pages, which means that each time the user makes a new request, they have to wait for a new page to load. This article, which refers to Italian law, is a heel. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.