Answer:
<u>B. Tip the bowl slightly, then spoon up the last bit</u>
Explanation:
Generally speaking none of the other answers made much of sense.. "tip the bowl from side to side" doesn't help you at all, neither does "Keep spooning as much as you can, then stop eating". Neither of these will help you spoon up the last little bit, <u>the most logical answer is B. "Tip the bowl slightly, then spoon up the last bit"</u>. If this is not the correct answer then it'd be D, but I don't believe/feel that it's "poor etiquette" to "leave the last little bit".
Answer:
#include <bits/stdc++.h>
using namespace std;
int main() {
int A[3][3],B[3][3],res[3][3],i,j;
srand(time(0));//for seed.
for(i=0;i<3;i++)
{
for(j=0;j<3;j++)
{
int val=rand()%100+1;//generating random values in range 1 to 100.
int val2=rand()%100+1;
A[i][j]=val;
B[i][j]=val2;
}
cout<<endl;
}
for(i=0;i<3;i++)
{
for(j=0;j<3;j++)
{
res[i][j]=0.5*A[i][j]+3*B[i][j];//storing the result in matrix res.
}
}
cout<<"Matrix A is"<<endl;
for(i=0;i<3;i++)
{
for(j=0;j<3;j++)
{
cout<<A[i][j]<<" ";//printing matrix A..
}
cout<<endl;
}
cout<<"Matrix B is"<<endl;
for(i=0;i<3;i++)
{
for(j=0;j<3;j++)
{
cout<<B[i][j]<<" ";//printing matrix B..
}
cout<<endl;
}
cout<<"The result is"<<endl;
for(i=0;i<3;i++)
{
for(j=0;j<3;j++)
{
cout<<res[i][j]<<" ";//printing the result..
}
cout<<endl;
}
return 0;
}
Output:-
Matrix A is
13 95 83
88 7 14
24 22 100
Matrix B is
11 13 95
48 35 20
68 100 18
The result is
39.5 86.5 326.5
188 108.5 67
216 311 104
Explanation:
I have created 2 matrices A and B and storing random numbers int the matrices A and B.Then after that storing the result in res matrix of type double to store decimal values also.Then printing the res matrix.
C) find and replace which finds the words you want to replace in a document and replaces them to whatever you specify