No, for example 'null' wouldn't do instead of 'NULL'.
The answer when typing the abbreviation for a fost to company should be typed in a lower case.
No but most of them are
Case-Sensitive code (in its literal sense) is any coding language that can dictate between lower and upper case input. For instance: if you write a program in Q-BASIC which is dependent upon user input, you must choose a constant to "define" that input: PROMPT FOR "A" IF A=6 THEN DISPLAY "you typed 6" This "program" would ask the user to input any variable they liked; if the variable HAPPEN to be 6 then the screen would display the text, now if: PROMPT FOR "A" IF a=6 THEN DISPLAY "you typed 6" This wouldn't work because the compiler can dictate between the lower and upper case A and a. (Yes I know my version of basic code is crude and shorthand but I was trying to give a short example)
All prepositions, articles and conjunctions should be lower case.
Case-Sensitive code (in its literal sense) is any coding language that can dictate between lower and upper case input. For instance: if you write a program in Q-BASIC which is dependent upon user input, you must choose a constant to "define" that input: PROMPT FOR "A" IF A=6 THEN DISPLAY "you typed 6" This "program" would ask the user to input any variable they liked; if the variable HAPPEN to be 6 then the screen would display the text, now if: PROMPT FOR "A" IF a=6 THEN DISPLAY "you typed 6" This wouldn't work because the compiler can dictate between the lower and upper case A and a. (Yes I know my version of basic code is crude and shorthand but I was trying to give a short example)
On the left side of your keyboard you will see a button that says "caps lock", push it. If the text is already typed, select the text that you have typed and hold down the Shift key and press the F3 key. It will convert between upper case, lower case and title cas, which is when the first letter is in capitals.
If they have already been typed, in Microsoft Word and Powerpoint select them all and then press Shift-F3 and you can change between the different case options, including upper, lower and sentence case. In Excel, you need to use the LOWER function.
Yes because in each case 32 words are typed each minute
It means that is a letter for a code appears as a capital or lower case on a code list then it must be typed as such. For example if you saw ECW you cant type EcW or Ecw because all the letters have to be capital
All formulas are converted to upper case when they have been typed in.
When a letter is typed under someone else's name, at the bottom of the letter, the initials of the author of the letter are placed in caps, followed by / mark, and lower case initials of the typist. A letter typed for Maggie Smith by Jane Doe would have MS/jd.
NH4NO3. All of the letters in this formula should be capitals, but something in the WikiAnswers program sometimes changes some or all of them to lower case!