Yes, when is dissolved (not distilled) in water or when is melted.
Solid sodium chloride is not an electrolyte.
Sodium chloride is an electrolyte only in solution or as melted, when is completely dissociated in ions.
Yes, because acetic acid is a weak acid (therefore it is a weak electrolyte), but NaCl is a salt that ionizes completely. In general salts and strong acids and bases are strong electrolyte, while weak acids and weak bases are weak electrolytes.
In water solution or in molten state NaCl is a strong electrolyte.
Sodium chloride is a strong electrolyte in solution or melted because is dissociaced in ions Na+ and Cl-.
Table salt is an electrolyte due to its ionic bonding. It will completely dissolve in aqueous solutions and is capable of conducting electricity.
Methanol is not a strong electrolyte because it produces fewer ions when dissolved in water compared to strong electrolytes like sodium chloride or hydrochloric acid.
Silver chloride is not considered a strong electrolyte. It does partially dissociate in water to form silver ions and chloride ions, but the dissociation is not complete. This means it has a lower conductivity compared to strong electrolytes like sodium chloride.
NaCl is an ionic compound. In water it dissolves completely forming ions. Since it dissolves completely forming Na^+ and Cl^- ions it is classified as a strong electrolyte.Strong electrolytes are completely dissociated into ions in solution and conduct an electrical current strongly.Weak electrolytes are only partly dissociated (examples are molecules like acetic acid which forms a weak electrolyte).Nonelectrolytes do not form ions at all and do not conduct electricity in their solutions.
Strong.
something is a strong electrolyte if it is a strong base, strong acid, or a soluble salt. Sodium acetate is in fact a soluble salt because anything with a group one element will dissolve. Sodium Acetate is a strong electrolyte.
Both potassium chloride and calcium chloride are strong electrolytes when dissolved in water or when molten.