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As a more simple answer to your question, Shakespeare shows that young love is an 'all or nothing' proposition. When Romeo is told by the Friar that his punishment will be banishment, and not death, Romeo replies that there is no world for him outside Verona.
There is also a measure of idealism in their love. Juliet and Romeo refuse to bend to the reality of their family situation, believing that love will conquer all.
Well let me explain this to you in a better way. The terms 'subprogram', 'function' and 'method' have all the same meaning in C/C++ but we usually called them functions, and we divide the functions into two types :
1)Function : it's the usual one, as we all know, it returns a value.
2) General format :
Type function_name(<arguments>){
// Your work
return <value/variable> //Note : the type must be the same as the function
// type.
}
Example :
int Maheen(int a, int b){
int c = a + b;
return c;
}
Procedure : it's a function but it doesn't return any value, it begins with 'void'.
General format :
void function_name(<arguments>){
// Your work
//Note : There is no return here.
}
Example :
void Maheen(int a, int b){
int c = a + b;
printf("The sum is : %d", c);
}
I think this can help you greatly
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