swap(&grades[num],&grades[num+1]);
what it make in a program?
In C, it is -4000.0 In others languages, it is -4000.0
#include<stdio.h> #include<conio.h> void main() { int n; clrscr(); printf("\n enter the number:"); scanf("%d",&n); if(n%2==0) printf("\n the number is even"); getch(); }
C-language was derived from B-language.
C Language is First Step of Programming Language, Help for C Language you are show the correct answer
You can multiply the number of radians by 180/pi.
It sucks, C++ is the way to go or even C#
C ++ is a computer progamming language just like Java, Python and Perl or even its predecessor 'C'.
1500
In C, it is -4000.0 In others languages, it is -4000.0
No, the first is a number (0x91), the second is a pointer.
Even b/c if the last number is even then even and if the last number is odd then the number is odd so 986 _6_ is even
#include<stdio.h> #include<conio.h> void main() { int n; clrscr(); printf("\n enter the number:"); scanf("%d",&n); if(n%2==0) printf("\n the number is even"); getch(); }
C-language was derived from B-language.
substracion of any two number program in c
any real number e.g, 15.5 1456.223 4568.12
In low level langauges like Assembly, you are working with the lowest possible chunks of code you can, machine code. The higher the level of a language, the more abstractions you use to organize ideas, and therefore, the less efficient it can become. For example, a regular integer in C or C++ on a 32bit system is simply 4 bytes. It can only represent a certain range of numbers, however. In the even higher level language of python, a number is an arbitrary number of bytes and can be as big as it needs to be, but a number in python is slightly bigger than the same number in C or C++ because it's structured differently.
C++