The only way to become an expert in any field is with experience. An educational background is helpful, but there are no shortcuts. Read everything you can about your chosen field and speak to like-minded individuals. Ultimately, experience takes time to develop. Without experience, you are no expert.
Nothing. In C++ you could write a C compiler. So, everything that can be done with C, can be also done in C++.
A bit of sound, depending how much PCM you take.
A C++ game project program could either be a game written in C++ or a C++ library that helps you develop a game.
b+b+b+c+c+c+c =3b+4c
c + c + 2c + c + c = 6c
b + b + b + c + c + c + c = 3b + 4c
Practitioner
4c
c + c + c + c + c = 5 * c.
There are no "primary and secondary keys" in c and c plus plus.
'Good housekeeping' in C++ (C Plus Plus) programming could refer to the tidiness of one's coding. Code that is messy and without structure can become difficult to read, and if passed to another programmer, difficult to understand. If you comment code, structure it consistently and with a constant style, your code will be clean enough so that any programmer could pick it up and understand it.
the iodine reacts with the vitamin c, removing the color the higher the content of vitamin c in the mix, the more colorless it is