Do you perhaps mean -- a two-dimensional array?
A two dimensional array is nothing more than a one-dimensional array where every element is a one-dimensional array.
int matrix[4][5];
C is a row-major language thus the first dimension refers to the number of rows. Here we have declared an array of 4 rows, where each row is an array of 5 elements of type int.
7 columns * 8 rows = 56 units
No. They are orthogonal.
A spreadsheet.
Rows are number and columns are identified by letters. After Column Z, the next one is AA, then AB, then AC and so on. After AZ you have BA, BB, BC and so on.
false The vertical columns are known as groups whereas the horizontal rows are known as periods.
just inter change the value a[i][j] to a[j][i]
There are eight rows and eight columns .
Rows are horizontal and columns are vertical.
When you insert rows in a worksheet, the new rows appear above the selected row; for example, if you insert a row above row 5, it will become the new row 5, and the original rows 5 and below will shift down. Similarly, when you insert columns, the new columns appear to the left of the selected column. For instance, inserting a column to the left of column C will make it the new column C, shifting the original columns C and D to the right.
An example is the grid of a spreadsheet. A spreadsheet uses vertical columns and horizontal rows. Columns are lettered A, B, C, and so on. Rows are numbered 1, 2, 3, and so on. A1 is the address of the first cell (top left-hand corner).
10 rows and 80 columns
msexcel have 1048576 rows and 16386 columns
No. Both have cells, but rows are horizontal and columns are vertical.
In Excel 97 there were 256 columns and 65536 rows.
No. A spreadsheet grid is made of rows and columns, not diagonals.
No. In versions up to Excel 2003 there are 256 columns and 65,536 rows. From 2007 on, there are 16,384 columns and 1,048,576 rows.
periods are the rows and families are the columns