Yes, for example:
#include <stdio.h>
int
main
(
int
argc, char **argv) {puts ("Hello, world");
return 0; }
To print blank or null lines and leading spaces using DBMS_OUTPUT in PL/SQL, you can use the DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE procedure. To create a blank line, simply call DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE('');. For leading spaces, include them in the string, such as DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE(' This line has leading spaces.');. This will ensure that both blank lines and lines with spaces are correctly output.
Yes, you can, but you use a special code thing.
To leave a blank line between drill lines, you typically do not use the tab key; instead, you would press the "Enter" key twice. Pressing "Enter" once moves to the next line, and pressing it again creates a blank line. The tab key is used for indenting text, not for creating blank lines.
A "site code" for reading plus is a code usually given to you by your teacher. Everyone in your school uses this code. You will have to use this the first time you sign in on reading plus.
use this: <br> for new lines, and use this: &nbsp; for spaces
The country code for Lithuania is +370. Mobile numbers are in the range +370 6. When writing a telephone number in international format, use only the plus sign, digits, and blank spaces, with no parentheses, dashes, dots, slashes, or other punctuation.
The country code for India is +91. You also need to drop the leading 0 from the domestic number. Use only the plus sign, digits, and spaces - no other punctuation, and especially no parentheses or brackets.For example, (022) 3456-7890 should be written as +91 22 3456 7890
You write your postal code (In the US, this is usually called ZIP code). If your country doesn't use them... leave it blank, I guess; if it's for a website and they won't let you leave it blank, make something up... if they get bad data, it's their own fault for not accounting for the fact that some countries don't use postal codes.
What does your local code say
No. Computer viruses use lines and strings of code.
the one without lines
Christopher Marlowe is credited with popularizing the use of blank verse in English poetry during the Elizabethan era. He used it in his plays, such as "Doctor Faustus" and "Tamburlaine." Blank verse is unrhymed iambic pentameter, a style that became more widely adopted by later poets, including William Shakespeare.