Answer:
#include<iostream>
#include<cmath>
#include <ctime>
using namespace std;
int main()
{
time_t t = time(NULL);
tm* timePtr = localtime(&t);
cout << "seconds= " << (timePtr->tm_sec) << endl;
cout << "minutes = " << (timePtr->tm_min) << endl;
cout << "hours = " << (timePtr->tm_hour) << endl;
cout << "day of month = " << (timePtr->tm_mday) << endl;
cout << "month of year = " << (timePtr->tm_mon)+1 << endl;
cout << "year = " << (timePtr->tm_year)+1900 << endl;
cout << "weekday = " << (timePtr->tm_wday )<< endl;
cout << "day of year = " << (timePtr->tm_yday )<< endl;
cout << "daylight savings = " <<(timePtr->tm_isdst )<< endl;
cout << endl;
cout << endl;
cout << "Date " <<(timePtr->tm_mday)<<"/"<< (timePtr->tm_mon)+1 <<"/"<< (timePtr->tm_year)+1900<< endl;
cout << "Time " << (timePtr->tm_hour)<<":"<< (timePtr->tm_min)<<":"<< (timePtr->tm_sec) << endl;
return 0;
}
Explanation:
Answer:
High
Explanation:
Python is high level; Bytecode is intermediate
Answer:
Answer = 25-17
print("25-17", Answer)
Explanation:
You put the sum into a variable which in this case would be Answer and then you can output it with the question.
Many admins set their firewalls to drop echo-request packets to prevent their networks from being mapped via "Ping Sweeps".
A remote possibility is that there's too many hops between the source and target and the packet's TTL expires.