I'm guessing that you mean STD = Subscriber Trunk Dialling (telephone area code) rather than STD = Sexually Transmitted Disease.
STD code is another term used in some country for telephone area codes. The purpose of a telephone area code is to group telephone numbers by geographic area. In many cases, at least some calls to numbers with the same STD code as the caller can be dialed without the STD code, allowing shorter dialing sequences for many local calls.
syphilis
std
Red
stand.AnswerIt may be "non standard" but I often see "std" used for this word.
Hobo Std.
MIL-STD-129 is a DoD general packaging specification commonly used for military contracts.
Confidential STD testing is used in accordance to the rules and regulations of various different medical associations and communities as well as experts.
Condoms are used on male penis to prevent pregnancy and STD transmission
Only if someone who has a STD used it before you for masturbation for instance and then you use it while their fluids are still on it. Vegetables don't carry STD's unless we put it on there. Same goes for other food items, furniture, cars etc.
#include<iostream> int main() { std::cout << "sin(1) = " << std::sin(1.0) << std::endl; std::cout << "cos(1) = " << std::cos(1.0) << std::endl; std::cout << "tan(1) = " << std::tan(1.0) << std::endl; std::cout << "asin(1) = " << std::asin(1.0) << std::endl; std::cout << "acos(1) = " << std::acos(1.0) << std::endl; std::cout << "atan(1) = " << std::atan(1.0) << std::endl; } Output: sin(1) = 0.841471 cos(1) = 0.540302 tan(1) = 1.55741 asin(1) = 1.5708 acos(1) = 0 atan(1) = 0.785398
#include<iostream> #include<vector> #include<string> std::vector<std::string> parse (const std::string& s, const char delim) { std::vector<std::string> result {}; auto start = 0U; auto end = s.find (delim); while (end != s.npos) { result.push_back (s.substr(start, end - start)); start = ++end; end = s.find (delim, start); } result.push_back (s.substr (start, s.npos - start)); return result; } std::vector<std::string> parse (const std::string& s, const std::string& delim) { std::vector<std::string> result {}; auto start = 0U; auto end = s.find (delim); while (end != s.npos) { result.push_back (s.substr(start, end - start)); start = end + delim.length(); end = s.find (delim, start); } result.push_back (s.substr (start, s.npos - start)); return result; } int main() { std::string str1 = "This is a string that will be parsed by a single-space delimiter."; std::string str2 = "This==is==a==string==that==will==be==parsed==by==equal==operator."; std::string str3 = "This string has no delimiter."; std::cout << str1 << std::endl; std::vector<std::string> v1 = parse (str1, ' '); for (auto i : v1 ) std::cout << i << std::endl; std::cout << std::endl; std::cout << str2 << std::endl; std::vector<std::string> v2 = parse (str2, "=="); for (auto i : v2 ) std::cout << i << std::endl; std::cout << std::endl; std::cout << str3 << std::endl; std::vector<std::string> v3 = parse (str3, '\\'); for (auto i : v3 ) std::cout << i << std::endl; std::cout << std::endl; }
The following example demonstrates all 4 loop structures in C++. #include<iostream> int main() { int i; std::cout<<"For loop...\n"<<std::endl; for(i=0; i<10; ++i) std::cout<<i; std::cout<<'\n'<<std::endl; std::cout<<"While loop...\n"<<std::endl; i=0; while(i<10) std::cout<<i++; std::cout<<'\n'<<std::endl; std::cout<<"Do-while loop...\n"<<std::endl; i=0; do { std::cout<<i; }while( ++i<10 ); std::cout<<'\n'<<std::endl; std::cout<<"Goto loop...\n"<<std::endl; i=0; again: std::cout<<i; if(++i<10) goto again; std::cout<<'\n'<<std::endl; } Output: For loop... 0123456789 While loop... 0123456789 Do-while loop... 0123456789 Goto loop... 0123456789