Powerpoint is generally the number one for this type of thing.
Answer:
The solution code is written in Java
- public static void checkCommonValues(int arr1[], int arr2[]){
- if(arr1.length < arr2.length){
- for(int i = 0; i < arr1.length; i++){
- for(int j = 0; j < arr2.length; j++){
- if(arr1[i] == arr2[j]){
- System.out.print(arr1[i] + " ");
- }
- }
- }
- }
- else{
- for(int i = 0; i < arr2.length; i++){
- for(int j = 0; j < arr1.length; j++){
- if(arr2[i] == arr1[j]){
- System.out.print(arr2[i] + " ");
- }
- }
- }
- }
- }
Explanation:
The key idea of this method is to repeated get a value from the shorter array to check against the all the values from a longer array. If any comparison result in True, the program shall display the integer.
Based on this idea, an if-else condition is defined (Line 2). Outer loop will traverse through the shorter array (Line 3, 12) and the inner loop will traverse the longer array (Line 4, 13). Within the inner loop, there is another if condition to check if the current value is equal to any value in the longer array, if so, print the common value (Line 5-7, 14-16).
it is title page and give me a ❤
Answer:
standardized browsers
standardized plain text
standardized HTML code
Explanation:
W3C standardizes web technologies. Now the domain is part of networking, and has nothing to do with the web. Also, browsers, plain text and HTML codes are part of the web technologies and hence are covered by W3C.