Newspapers are irrelevant now, magazines will get you much more viewers.
You have an upcoming exam and you are confident that you have read all your books and believe you know your stuff down cold. Somehow, after sitting for your exam, you fail. To avoid this from happening again, you can use methods like SQRW or KWL to make sure that you get a better grade. Each of these techniques are initials that stand for “Survey”, “Question”, “Read”, and “Write” (SQRW) and “Know,” “Want to Know,” and “Learned” (KWL) respectively. People who make the most out of these two strategies will understand what they read and prepare notes of what they learned. These notes will come in handy when sitting for an exam. KWL, specifically, help student become better versions of themselves and improve in reading expository text.
Answer:
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
int main()
{
string s;
cin>>s; //reading string
int i,j;
bool has_dups=false;
int n= s.length();
for(i=0;i<n;i++) //to check for duplicate characters
{
for(j=0;j<n;j++)
{
if(j!=i && s[i]==s[j]) //to check if it is matched with itself
{
has_dups=true; //if true no need to check others
break;
}
}
}
cout<<has_dups;
return 0;
}
OUTPUT :
California
1
Explanation:
Above program finds if a character repeat itself in the string entered by user.
Ben can use the "Appear" animation, but he has to make sure he sets the effect options to "By paragraph", otherwise all bullets appear at the same time. I'm sure Ben can figure that out.