Everybody uses a comma, except the English-speaking nations.
Press MATH then 9 (fnInt() enter the function comma enter the variable comma enter the lower bound comma enter the upper bound
The comma.
In French, the number 9.25 is said as "neuf virgule vingt-cinq." The decimal point is referred to as "virgule," which means "comma" in English. So, 9.25 is literally translated as "nine comma twenty-five" in French.
No. After the word and comma can not be used, as it is grammatically inappropriate to use comma after conjunctions such as and, which are called coordinate conjunctions.
No, a comma is not necessary.
no
no
You can use a comma after an opener , so if it is 'Finally' the opener you are talking about, then yes.
In a company name such as "ABC Corp," do not use a comma. However, use a comma in the formulation, "ABC, Inc."
You can use ", and" or just "and" but not just a comma.
The use of a comma does not depend on the word, it depends on the sentence structure. At times a comma will follow 'which' and at other times it will not.
In math, a comma typically represents a decimal point, not addition or multiplication. For example, in the number 1,000, the comma separates the whole number from the decimal part. In mathematical operations, the symbols "+" and "x" are used to denote addition and multiplication, respectively.