Change your keyboard configuration to US layout.
<Shift><Tab> takes you backwards through the tab order instead of forwards.
In Microsoft Word, CTRL+SHIFT+PLUS is used to apply superscript formatting with automatic spacing to the selected text.
There is no alternative to fscanf() in C++. The same function can be used in both C and C++. For C++, the function can be found in the <cstdio> standard library header. Note that Microsoft Visual Studio will claim that fscanf() is unsafe and recommends using the non-portable fscanf_s() instead. However, you can disable this warning by placing the following pragma on the line immediately before the call to fscanf(). #pragma warning(suppress:4996);
V = 155*sin[120pi*t + a] where V is the voltage, t is the time in seconds and a is the phase shift.
An asterisk in C++, such as int *data, is what's known as a pointer. A pointer is like a regular variable, but instead of holding a value, a pointer holds the memory location of the value. It's a somewhat difficult concept, and you can learn more about it here: See related links section below...
wrong answer lol
<Shift><Tab> takes you backwards through the tab order instead of forwards.
<Shift><Tab> takes you backwards through the tab order instead of forwards.
Shift 6 gives you the ^ symbol. Shift + F6 moves to a previous pane if you have several windows open and you are moving through them.
ctrl shift - reverses the effect of ctrl shift =
Try pressing <Ctrl> + <Shift> + <Esc> instead.
nothing
Jjg
It zooms in on the page.
On Firefox, Ctrl + Shift + W closes all currently open tabs.
what plus what gives me 24
There's nothing wrong with my C++.