There are several functions for commas.
Series - "apples, Oranges, and bananas"
Coordinate adjectives - "brilliant, bright diamond"
Compound sentences (used with coordinating conjunctions) - "I told him that, and I dismissed him."
Introductory phrases - "During the 1800s, a bunch of stuff happened."
Appositive phrases - "This user, TheGrammarian, is totally awesome."
(2, 1) or (2, 4).
NO YOU DON'T PUT COMMA IN THE WORD THAT BECAUSE IT HAS A QUESTION MARK IN IT,AND THAT QUESTION MARK REPRESENT IT'S OWN FUNCTION.
Press MATH then 9 (fnInt() enter the function comma enter the variable comma enter the lower bound comma enter the upper bound
The comma button will apply comma formatting to cells, so a value like 10000 will become 10,000. Commas are also used in functions to separate the different arguments used in a function.
No they do not. Semicolons can separate independent clauses; commas cannot do that.
graph the ordered pairs (4, -2) AND (1, -1) AND CONNECT TO FORM A line. Which quadrant contains no point for this linear function? Explain your answer
No comma is necessary before "Jr.", "Sr.", and the like. No comma has ever been necessary before "III", "IV", etc. From the Chicago Manual of Style (http://ow.ly/gcv0):But please note that within text, if you decide to use the more traditional comma before Jr. or Sr., the function of the comma is to set off these abbreviations, so an additional comma is needed after the abbreviation if the sentence continues (as in my first sentence above).
last comma before the and is not necessary
That depends on the syntax rules of the language in which you are programming. However, the "," is the most usual separator).
No, there is not a comma after "except that."
5 comma 300 comma 000 comma 000 comma 000 comma 000.
A condition has to be specified. One or both of the True and False arguments can be left out, though you must place a comma after the condition.