Answer:
Your answer is option C, or the third option.
They do not let the user type in letters, numbers, and words.
Explanation:
Strings are defined as a sequence of characters literal, constant, or variable. These sequences are like an array of data or list of code that represents a structure. Formally in a language, this includes a finite(limited) set of symbols derived from an alphabet. These characters are generallu given a maximum of one byte of data each character. In longer languages like japanese, chinese, or korean, they exceed the 256 character limit of an 8 bit byte per character encoding because of the complexity of the logogram(character representing a morpheme((which is the simpliest morphological(form or structure) unit of language with meaning)) character with 8 bit (1 byte, these are units of data) refers to cpu(central processing unit) which is the main part of a computer that processes instructions, and sends signals.
Answer:
Cultural bias
Explanation:
Certain verifiable studies have been made across the United States of America on traffic stops, which revealed significant cases of cultural/racial bias. Black people were 20 percent more likely to be stopped and searched by the police than white people.
Within a six-year period, starting from 2011, researchers studied over 100 million traffic stops cases which were carried out by twenty-one state patrol agencies.
Not sure in what environment your asking for, but in C programming, %d is an integer (basically a number), %c is a character, that is a single alphanumeric character, where as %s is a series of alphanumeric characters, in programming %s is actually just an array of characters (so multiple %c), but don't worry about that to much.
Examples in c.
int number = 1;
char character = "c"; (numbers (integers) can be characters)
char string[5] = "abcd"; ([5] implies 5 characters, here there are 4, that is because an invisible character exists known as a "null terminator" (\0).
True
cat /dev/null > fileName
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