A double is a floating point type, greater than or equal in size to a float.
No, a double is a datatype, the same as float but with twice the range.
helps you to organise the memory as you want
C: there are no methods in C. C++: no.
c is procedure oriented and c++ is object oriented & much newer.
If a + b + c + d + 80 + 90 = 100, then a + b + c + d = -70.
C++ is related to C, the language from which it is derived.
Ambiguous Modifier
console.wrikerle("""");
double (or, on some platforms, long double)
helps you to organise the memory as you want
double, but double is nearly twice the precision of float, so its not really the same thing.
modifier
int i = 42; char c = ( char ) i; // explicit cast double d = i; // implicit cast
b+b+b+c+c+c+c =3b+4c
c + c + 2c + c + c = 6c
b + b + b + c + c + c + c = 3b + 4c
#include ...double x, y;...y = cosh (x);
The correct answer would be "D".