its means just chillin or Jesus Christ it depends
It's the model number.
J. J. C. Smart was born on 1920-09-16.
for (i=0; i<IMAX; i++) for (j=0; j<JMAX; j++) c[i,j] = a[i,j] + b[i,j];
Obviously there is more than one way to do this. VL = Ldi/dt Volts has units of Joules/Coulomb: J/C i has units of Coulombs/second: C/s So di/di is C/s^2 L has units of J/C / C/s^2 = Js^2/C^2 Ic = CdV/dt => Ic/dV/dt = C/s / J/C-s = C/s * C-s/J = C^2/J C has units of C^2/J OR you could just type Q = CV => C = Q/V = C/J/C = C^2/J same answer R = V/I => J/C / C/s = J-s/C^2
#include<stdio.h> #include<conio.h> void main() { clrscr(); int i,j,m,a[20],b[20],c[20],max; printf("enter no of elements"); scanf("%d",&m); printf("enter elements"); for(i=0;i<=m;i++) { scanf("%d",&a[i]); } max=a[i]; for(i=0;i<=m;i++) { if(max<a[i]) { max=a[i]; } } for(i=0;i<=max;i++) { c[i]=0; } for(j=0;j<=m;j++) { c[a[j]]=c[a[j]]+1; } for(i=0;i<=max;i++) { c[i]=c[i]+c[i-1]; } for(j=m;j>=1;j--) { b[c[a[j]]]=a[j]; c[a[j]]=c[a[j]]-1; } printf("AFTER SORTING"); for(i=0;i<=m;i++) { printf("%d",b[i]); } getch(); }
J. C. Bamford, a British manufacturer of heavy industrial and agricultural vehicles; hence JCB can also mean a backhoe digger/excavator in Britain and EuropeSee http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J._C._Bamford_(person)
J. C. C Church has written: 'Mining research review'
James Cash
J. C. Coleman died in 1971.
J. C. Powell died in 1988.
J. C. Powell was born in 1926.
J. C. Squire was born in 1884.