C♯ major and A♯ minor both have seven sharps.
The major scale with 2 sharps is D major, they are F and C sharp.
There are no sharps in F minor.
C major has no sharps or flats.
The B major scale has 5 sharps: F#, C#, G#, D#, A#.
The major scale with five sharps is B major. The five sharps, in written order, according to the key signature, are F#, C#, G#, D#, A#.
A scale can only have up to 7 sharps (or flats) because there are only 7 different notes in a scale.
Yes, C flat major scale has 7 flats and the enharmonic key - B major has 5 sharps.
There are no sharps in F minor.
A chromatic scale will, by definition, have sharps and/or flats.
The major scale with 2 sharps is D major, they are F and C sharp.
There are no sharps or flats in C Major.
There are no sharps in the key signature, but in the harmonic minor there is a G#.
C major has no sharps or flats.
The Cx Major scale will have 14 sharps (all 7 double-sharps), and the scale goes like this: Cx, Dx, Ex (same as F♯), Fx, Gx, Ax, Bx (same as C♯), Cx.
C major scale and A minor.
The C major scale...
The B major scale has 5 sharps: F#, C#, G#, D#, A#.