Answer:
Multiply(m,n)
1. Initialize product=0.
2. for i=1 to n
3. product = product +m.
4. Output product.
Explanation:
Here we take the variable "product" to store the result m×n. And in this algorithm we find m×n by adding m, n times.
For each user who comes to your site the google analytics automatically capture the traffic source dimensions Source, Medium, Campaign name.
<u>Explanation:</u>
Source:
- There cannot be any reference to a website without an origin source.
- The source is basically the origin of your traffic such as a search engine (google) or a domain (ex: Twitter).
Medium:
- Every referral to a website also has a medium along with the source.
- examples are -: unpaid search, "cost per click", referral, mail.
Campaign name:
- The campaign Name is the name referring to the google ads campaign.
Reliability is the major argument for the exclusive use of Boolean expressions (expressions that result to either true or false) inside control statements (i.e. if…else, for loop). Results from control statements become reliable because Java has disallowed other types to be used. Other types, like arithmetic expressions in C++ oftentimes include typing errors that are not detected by the compiler as errors, therefore causing confusion.
Answer:
- Use the one that reads most clearly.
- If you can’t decide, just pick one.
- If you can’t then use for()
- If at any point later in time you change your mind, refactor your code.
This is how professionals work. Decide, and for all things with low impact to change, don’t sweat it.
Save that for architectural and API design choices.
Answer#2:
- Well if you are looking for a simple technique to choose which loop to use you can use these rules.
- Use for loops when there's a sequence of elements that you want to iterate.
- Use while loops when you want to repeat an action until a condition changes.
And if whatever you are trying to do can be done with either for or while loops then just choose your favourite :)