<span>The 'Pin the ribbon' button replaces the 'Collapse the Ribbon' button when the ribbon is collapsed. You will see the 'Pin the ribbon' button only when you expand a ribbon by tapping or clicking a tab.</span>
The following code will program that prompts the user to enter the num- ber of hours a car is parked at the airport and outputs the parking fee.
<u>Explanation:</u>
Code:
#include<iostream>
using namespace std;
int main()
{
float hours;
cout <<"Enter number of hours a car parked at the airport: "; // prompt the user to enter hours.
cin >> hours ; // strong the hours
if (hours > = 0 && hours < =3 ) // if 0 < = h < = 3
cout << "Parking fee: 5"; //printing parking fee is 5.
else if (hours > 3 && hours < = 9)//if 3 < h < = 9
cout<<"Parking fee: "<<6*int(hours);//converting float value to int the multiplying with 6 then printing fee.
else//if 9 < h < = 24
cout<< "Parking fee: 60";// printing parking fee 60.
return 0;
}
Answer:
1) A string is "non-numeric data". In other words, it is text.
2) False, a runtime error means that there is a problem, but it will be with the software, not the hardware.
3) An impossible task such as dividing five by zero is a logical error. Not using quotes on a string would be a syntax error, printing an inaccurate statement is not an error at all (as far as the program is concerned anyway), and using camelcase on a variable with multiple words is a common convention.
4) variableName = "value"
5) The code provided here is illegible, so I can't give a straight answer. It seems to be missing operators.