Answer:
I grew up in the early internet stages. when i was young we would always have to sit at school, meetup somewhere, in town, or use the home phone. But when the internet was invented we could talk to each other through our computers at home. Old computers were so bulky and slow, but that was the coolest thing around. Now i can sit at home with my 20'' moniter on my 5g wifi and talking to my friends like theres no tomorrow. The internet has changed so much in the last years. If you were gonna tell me that one day ill be sitting at home playing games online and working from home on a laptop i would have told you that you were crazy.
Explanation:
Here is an HTML example with the CSS class defined inline:
<!doctype html>
<html>
<head>
<style>
.YellowBackground {
background-color : yellow;
}
</style>
</head>
<body class="YellowBackground">
<h1>A yellow background</h1>
</body>
</html>
Answer:
Explanation:
1. Write a program that declares an array named alpha with 50 components of the type double. Initialize the array so that the first 25 components are equal to the square of the counter (or index) variable and the last 25 components are equal to three times the index variable.
double alpha[50];
for (int i=0;i<25;i++)
{
alpha[i]=i*i;
alpha[i+25]=(i+25)*3;
}
2. Output the array so that exactly ten elements per line are printed.
for (int i=0;i<50;i++)
{
cout<<i+1<<". "<<alpha[i]<<" ";
if (((i+1)%10)==0)
{
cout<<endl;
}
}
3. Run your program again, but this time change the code so that the array is filled with random numbers between 1 and 100.
double alpha[50];
for (int i=0;i<50;i++)
{
alpha[i]=rand()%101;
}
for (int i=0;i<50;i++)
{
cout<<i+1<<". "<<alpha[i]<<" ";
if (((i+1)%10)==0)
{
cout<<endl;
}
}
4. Write the code that computes and prints the average of elements of the array.
double alpha[50],temp=0;
for (int i=0;i<50;i++)
{
alpha[i]=rand()%101;
temp+=alpha[i];
}
cout<<"Average :"<<(temp/50);
5. Write the code that that prints out how many of the elements are EXACTLY equal to 100.
double alpha[50],temp=0;
for (int i=0;i<50;i++)
{
alpha[i]=rand()%101;
if(alpha[i]==100)
{
temp++;
}
}
cout<<"Elements Exacctly 100 :"<<temp;
Please note: If you put each of above code to the place below comment it will run perfectly after compiling
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
int main()
{
// If you put each of above code here it will run perfectly after compiling
return 0;
}
Answer: Limits the row data that are returned.
Explanation: In structured query language (SQL), The where clause is used as a filter. The filter is applied to a column and as such the filter value or criteria determines the values that are spared in the column on which the WHERE clause is applied. All rows in which the column value does not meet the WHERE clause criteria are exempted from the output. This will hence limit the number of rows which our command displays.
For instance,
FROM * SELECT table_name WHERE username = 'fichoh' ;
The command above filters the username column for username with fichoh, then displays only rows of Data with fichoh as the username. All data columns are displayed but rows of data which do not match fichoh are exempted.