Usually four bytes.
Because you are using a compiler (TurboC, most likely) which was developed some 25 years ago, for a 16-bit platform.
That depends on whether you are asking whether more people use Windows or Linux or which system supports more users. The maximum number of users in a modern Linux system is 4,294,967,295. Windows doesn't have any specific limit that has been published, but each account takes up a significant amount of space, limiting the number to well below the limit in Linux. As to how many people use them, more people use Windows on their personal computers than Linux.
Based on its sheer configurability, a modern Linux kernel takes the cake by far. it is still possible to use a modern kernel with a basic userland in 4 MB of RAM.
if your asking if it takes up giga bytes then yes it takes some memory cause it is online utility
Linux is free. However, this question can be taken at an angle of total cost of ownership or time cost investment. Since specific versions or distributions are not specified this cannot be answered. Some RedHat versions can be more expensive than some Windows versions. Linux sometimes takes more time to maintain than Windows, so overall it can switch license costs into time costs. If Windows systems take fewer employees to run, then the higher initial license costs can be viewed as necessary and Windows as "less expensive" over time. For a private party on a personal computer, Linux like Ubuntu, can be less expensive to install and operate.
As there are no wild viruses for Linux there is nothing to "take them off."
Roblox takes up: 1.5 Giga Bytes, which is the same as 1000 mega bytes
how many bytes are there in a 64-bit machine? Another Answer: It takes 8 bytes to store a 64 bit number.
in java, char consumes two bytes because it uses unicode instead of ascii. and int takes 4 bytes because 32-bit no will be taken
how many bytes are there in a 64-bit machine? Another Answer: It takes 8 bytes to store a 64 bit number.
Unlike Microsoft Windows, the Linux system is extremely configurable. The X-Windows system itself just puts the windows on the display device and takes input from devices (keyboard and mouse). It has been written to be network aware from the start so that programs running on one machine can have their display and input on another machine. (When running X-windows on a single machine it uses the loop-back network of the machine.) However, it requires a windows manager to add the buttons, window borders and to handle clicks to resize the window, etc. There are various window managers available, from the basic twm to powerful ones like Enlightenment; the different window managers offer different things. There are also two projects which give Linux the desktop of Microsoft Windows: Gnome and KDE. These both still require a window manager. It is the configuration of the window manager that makes the Linux desktop look like it does, so that it can look like Microsoft Windows (if required).
The quotient of an integer divided by an integer with the opposite sign is always negative.