You people are crazy now adays!:) lol
No idea; please restate the question.
5
Sir, your question is not clear. If you just want to multiply 3 and 24 then why are you trying to use arrays for such simple calculation.
for arrays you can list the different arrays and what attributes that you give to them.
Arrays whose size can be altered are known as dynamic arrays.
You don't need to use ampersand for arrays; it's entirely optional even for strings (character arrays). This is because arrays will implicitly convert to a pointer at the slightest provocation. Thus for an array named X, you can either pass the array to a function as X, &X or &X[0], they all refer to the exact same address.
we can call the number that cannot be arranged into 2- row arrays multiple arrays.
6
Four
Sir, your question is not clear. If you just want to multiply 3 and 24 then why are you trying to use arrays for such simple calculation.
9,9
1 x 24 2 x 12 3 x 8 4 x 6
You can show 24 cans in one row, 12 cans in 2 rows, 8 cans in 3 rows, and 6 cans in 4 rows.
1 x 24 2 x 12 3 x 8 4 x 6
I assume you mean that you have a number of rows, and that not all rows have the same number of "cells". Yes, in Java a two-dimensional array is implemented as an array of arrays (each item in the top-level array is, in itself, an array); a 3-dimensional array is an array of arrays of arrays, etc.; and there is no rule stating that all secondary (etc.) arrays must have the same number of elements.
Arrays having more than one dimension is known as multi-dimensional arrays. Multi-dimensional arrays is also known as arrays-of-arrays.
Arrays having more than one dimension is known as multi-dimensional arrays. Multi-dimensional arrays is also known as arrays-of-arrays.
You cannot sort arrays by other arrays; that wouldn't make sense, anyway.
Arrays are reported to be omnivoire.