Yes, Java supports multidimensional Arrays.
Syntax is
int[ ][ ] aryNumbers = new int[x][y];
x represents number of rows
y represents number of columns
for arrays you can list the different arrays and what attributes that you give to them.
There are many places where one could find advice about working with Java sorting arrays. The best place to learn more about working with Java would be to contact Oracle.
It is possible to use arrays when employing java programming language. There are many different series of programming choice that can be employed with various end results.
Java does not support multiple inheritance.......
A multidimensional array in C or C++ is simply an array of arrays, or an array of an array of arrays, etc. for however many dimensions you want. int a; // not an array int a[10]; // ten int a's int a[10][20]; // twenty int a[10]'s, or 200 int a's int a[10][20][30]; // and so on and so forth...
for arrays you can list the different arrays and what attributes that you give to them.
Java does not support associative arrays. However, you can achieve the same thing using a map.
There are many places where one could find advice about working with Java sorting arrays. The best place to learn more about working with Java would be to contact Oracle.
One efficient Java implementation for finding the median of two sorted arrays is to merge the arrays into one sorted array and then calculate the median based on the length of the combined array.
It is possible to use arrays when employing java programming language. There are many different series of programming choice that can be employed with various end results.
Yes. int[][] as; // this will define an array of arrays of integers Multidimensional arrays, remember, are simply arrays of arrays. So a two-dimensional array of type int is really an object of type int array (int []), with each element in that array holding a reference to another int array. The second dimension holds the actual int primitives. The following code declares and constructs a two-dimensional array of type int: int[][] myArray = new int[3][]; Notice that only the first brackets are given a size. That's acceptable in Java, since the JVM needs to know only the size of the object assigned to the variable myArray.
I assume you mean that you have a number of rows, and that not all rows have the same number of "cells". Yes, in Java a two-dimensional array is implemented as an array of arrays (each item in the top-level array is, in itself, an array); a 3-dimensional array is an array of arrays of arrays, etc.; and there is no rule stating that all secondary (etc.) arrays must have the same number of elements.
Java does not support multiple inheritance.......
Better for what? Arrays have their purposes, other constructs have other purposes. Depending on what you need, an array may be just what you need.
Strings and Arrays are two totally different data types in Java and they will not match with one another.
No it does not support Java
A multidimensional array in C or C++ is simply an array of arrays, or an array of an array of arrays, etc. for however many dimensions you want. int a; // not an array int a[10]; // ten int a's int a[10][20]; // twenty int a[10]'s, or 200 int a's int a[10][20][30]; // and so on and so forth...