strictfp forces floating points (and any floating-point operations) to adhere to the IEEE 754 standard. With strictfp, you can predict how your floating points will behave regardless of the underlying platform the JVM is running on. The downside is that if the underlying platform is capable of supporting greater precision, a strictfp method won't be able to take advantage of it.
No, 'check' is not a keyword in java language.
There is no "foreign" keyword in Java, however, there is a native keyword that declares native methods in a native language, such as C or C++.For full list of keywords in Java see related question.
Literal in java are L, F, null, true, false These act as keyword(have special meaning in java) but these does'nt comes under the category of Java Keyword.
sizeof is not a keyword in Java but many classes have size() or length() methods, which can mean the number of elements, characters, etc. depending on the class.
we do it using the throw keyword.
No, 'check' is not a keyword in java language.
strictfp forces floating points (and any floating-point operations) to adhere to the IEEE 754 standard. With strictfp, you can predict how your floating points will behave regardless of the underlying platform the JVM is running on. The downside is that if the underlying platform is capable of supporting greater precision, a strictfp method won't be able to take advantage of it.
yes, float is keyword and data type in java
"verify" is not a Java keyword. I believe the link, in related links, has the complete list of Java keywords.
There is no "foreign" keyword in Java, however, there is a native keyword that declares native methods in a native language, such as C or C++.For full list of keywords in Java see related question.
Literal in java are L, F, null, true, false These act as keyword(have special meaning in java) but these does'nt comes under the category of Java Keyword.
"int" is the keyword for integer
In Java, the final keyword specifies that the object created cannot be further redefined or derived.
"this" is a Java keyword that references the current object. Any part of the object(instance variables, methods, constructors) can be accessed by calling this.[member].
sizeof is not a keyword in Java but many classes have size() or length() methods, which can mean the number of elements, characters, etc. depending on the class.
new is a keyword to create a instance of object any class.
we do it using the throw keyword.