The term is 'eye jay' (I-J) and the classification indicates a 'near colourless' white.
You can read more about this classification and see it in context, below.
If J is a description of the colour of a white diamond, that grade is given to the near colourless diamonds. You can learn more about this grade from the chart, below, which shows you the full colour range of 'colourless diamonds' from D to Z.
#include<stdio.h> #include<string.h> #include<conio.h> int count=0; char arr1[20],arr2[20]; int main() { int j; arr1[0]=1; arr1[1]='\0'; int flag=3; for(j=3;j>=-1;j--) printf(" "); printf("1\n"); while(flag>=0) { for(j=3;j>=count;j--) printf(" "); arr2[0]=arr1[0]; arr2[strlen(arr1)]=arr1[strlen(arr1)-1]; for(j=1;j<=(strlen(arr1)-1);j++) arr2[j]=arr1[j]+arr1[j-1]; arr2[strlen(arr1)+1]='\0'; for(j=0;j<strlen(arr2);j++) printf("%d ",arr2[j]); for(j=0;j<=strlen(arr2);j++) arr1[j]=arr2[j]; flag--; count++; printf("\n\n"); } getch(); }
"14k F G J" typically refers to a piece of jewelry made of 14-karat gold with specific gemstone characteristics. The "F," "G," and "J" likely indicate the color and clarity grades of diamonds or gemstones, following a grading scale. In this context, "F" represents a color grade of "Colorless," "G" is "Near Colorless," and "J" is "Slightly Tinted," with higher grades indicating better quality.
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If you mean work as in energy it is joules (j).
A diamond with a color grade of I-J falls within the near-colorless range. This means the diamond will have a slight hint of yellow or brown tint, which may be noticeable to the naked eye. The overall quality and beauty of a diamond depend on factors such as cut, clarity, and carat weight, in addition to color.
Near colorless
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A 4.36 round diamond J color and VS2 clarity with a very good cut is worth about $54,138. For details on this and other information, get in touch with us via www.dubaiwholesalediamonds.com/enquiry.
Oddly, colour ranking in white diamonds ranks the lack of colour. Grades H, I, and J are all ranked as near colourless, with H and I being a higher rank than J. You can read more and see colour values in the link, below.
"Good is relative." From an investment point of view, the J colour is in the 'yellowish' cast category, because the slight yellow colour can be detected by the human eye beginning with H colour. The least yellow diamond is classified as a D colour.
There really is not such a thing as an average price for a diamond as such. Diamonds are priced by 4 factors (the 4 Cs)--cut, clarity, color, and carat (weight). Cut refers to how well the diamond is cut. Clarity refers to the internal flaws the diamond might have. The more flaws the less it is worth. Color refers to the color of the diamond. A white diamond is worth considerably more than one that is yellowish. Finally carat weight refers to the size of the diamond. The bigger the diamond the greater the price. You are asking for an average so if we assume an average cut, average color, average clarity, and a smaller size carat weight assuming more of those are sold than of the larger diamonds and if we assume just the diamond and no setting, then we can perhaps give you a rough idea of what the price might be. Certainly, the most popular clarity would be one with very slight imperfections. The color of the average diamond would probably have some slight color when compared to a colorless diamond probably a J or I color. Cut would be good to very good rather than ideal. Let us then assume a 0.5 carat diamond, J or I color, very good cut, with very slight imperfections. Blue Nile sells these diamonds for about $1100 to $1300 each.
If you mean in the group {1, -1, i, -i, j, -j, k, -k}, the identity element is 1.
Prima j's fav color is black
jessie j's favorite color is red and pink
printf ("12345 1234 123 12 1\n"); ... or, did you mean to do it with loops ? ... int i, j; for (i=5; i>0; i--) { for (j=1; j<=i; j++) printf ("%d", j); printf (" "); } printf ("\n");
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