char x = "C"; if(char == 'C') { } else { }
As usual, you should check official documentation before you ask a question like this. string.h // Copies num characters from source into destination. char* strncpy (char* destination, const char* source, size_t num); // Copies characters from source into destination. char* strcpy (char* destination, const char* source);
char* u_strcpy (char* dest, const char* src) { char* temp = dest; while ((*dest++ = *src++) != '\0'); return temp; }
char* strcpy(const char* src, char* dst) { char* tmp = dst; while ((*dst++ = *src++) != '\0'); return tmp; }
char c = 'a'; 'a' is a literal character, which assigns the value 0x61 (ASCII code 97 decimal) to the char variable c. The following lines are therefore equivalent: char a = 0x61; char b = 97; char c = 'a';
Legend
The legend identifies the colors that represent the bars.
legend
char
Legend
Char.
bar char far scar star
char, star
The legend is the function that identifies the data marker for each series in a chart.
The legend identifies patterns used for each series.
Bar codes have a meaning because the meaning of a bar code is assigned to that bar code. A bar code identifies an item, and product information regarding that item is held in a data base.
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