First Statement ended in 1945.
A semi-colon denotes the end of a statement. If you omit the semi-colon, the statement will extend into the next expression and this will result in a compiler error because a semi-colon will have been expected at the end of the first expression.
paraprodokian is adding a phrase onto the end of a statement that makes you reinterpret how you first thought of the statement. Example. If I agree with you, we are both wrong.
A 'stop' statement may only introduce a delay while an 'end' statement terminates the process.
The computer language has a grammar for the syntax. Not all computer languages using ; to end a statement. The if-statements DO end with an ; (except when a <compound statement>) in C#, C, PHP, and Java (and many others). In fact, most of <statement> end with ; in those languages, and <if-statement> is just one of the derived <statement>. However, for statements like: if (1 == 2) {} else {}, the {} is a <compound statement> which does not end with a ; syntactically.
First Statement was created in 1942.
No. Today (5-21-2011) is not described as the end; it is described as the beginning of the end. That said, you can describe ANY day as the beginning of the end, even a day in the past. For example, the statement, "Today is the first day of the rest of your life" is a statement that is true every single day.
The semi-colon ( ; ) is used to indicate the end of a statement in JavaScirpt.
No. That would be a syntax error. Only a right semicolon (;) can go at the end of a statement.
A statement is a declarative sentence, and it ends with a period. Other kinds of sentences are questions, which end with question marks, and exclamations, which end with exclamation points.
Inverse (Tested)
Income statement.
yes, all accounts must be closed at the end of the period on the income statement