No. The only effect of being born on "leap day", February 29th, is that the other years you celebrate your birthday on February 28th.
Unless, of course, your name is Frederic and you were apprenticed to the Pirate King until your 21st Birthday; THEN you're screwed. Until you fall in love with the daughter of the Major-General.
It's a leap year and starts on a Sunday, so you have to go back to 1984.
Well go look on a calender! But not a leap year one!
To determine whether a year is a leap year, follow these steps:If the year is evenly divisible by 4, go to step 2. Otherwise, go to step 5.If the year is evenly divisible by 100, go to step 3. Otherwise, go to step 4.If the year is evenly divisible by 400, go to step 4. Otherwise, go to step 5.The year is a leap year (it has 366 days).The year is not a leap year (it has 365 days).
i don't no what it means go mc Micheal
The Earth moves the same in a leap year as it does in any other year. We have leap years because Earth takes about 365.25 days to go around the sun, not 365 days, so a leap year makes up for that in order to keep our calendars correct.
Yes. You can actually go for 8 years. Years divisible by 100, but not by 400 are not leap years. So 2100 will not be a leap year. 2096 will and the next will be 2104. The year 2000 was a leap year, because it was divisible by 400.
Yes. It has to be done, in order to keep in line with the time Earth takes to orbit the Sun. It is not exactly 365 days, so without leap years our calendars would slowly go out of sync with our year as experienced by our seasons on Earth. So it is not just a good idea, but an essential one.
it is an opinion so better go watch it
No, it was not. We often thing that all years that are multiples of 4 are leap years, but there are two exceptions to the general rule. 1. Century years - year numbers divisible by 100 - are NOT leap years, except.... 2. Years that are evenly divisible by 400, such as 1600, 2000, and 2400, ARE leap years. If the Earth took exactly 365 days to go around the Sun, there would be no need for leap years. If the Earth took exactly 365.25 years to go around the Sun, then we would still need Exception #1. But the Earth actually takes 365.26 days to go around the Sun, so we need both exception rules.
#include #include void main() { int y; clrscr(); print f ("enter a year"); scan f ("%d",&y) (y%100==0):((y%400==0)?print f("% d is leap year",y):print f("%d is not leap year",y):((y%4==0)? print f ("d is leap year",y): print f ("%d is leap year",y): print f ("%d is not leap year,y)); getch(); }
It was a Saturday. You can figure out any day from the date if you know what the first day of the current year is and go backfactoring in leap years. You know that February 7th will always be the 38th day of the year, leap year or not.
It depends on the month and whether it is a leap year.