Answer:
Option 3 is the correct answer.
Explanation:
- In c, c++ or Java programming language, The for loop takes three parameters in which first is an initialization, second is condition check and the third is an increment. None of the other loop (except for loop) takes three parameters. The other loop takes only one parameter and that is the condition check.
- So when a user knows about the times of iteration then it is a good choice to use the for loop but when the person does not know about the times of iteration if the loop. It means the iteration of the loop is based on the condition then it is a good choice to chose while or Do-while loop.
- The above question wants to ask which loop for a user can best if he familiar with the iteration of the loop then the answer is for loop which is started from option 3. Hence Option 3 is the correct answer while the other is not because--
- Option 1 states about the do-while loop which takes condition only.
- Option 2 states about the while loop which also takes condition only.
- Option 4 states about the infinite loop which is not any loop.
- Option 5 states about none of these which is not correct because option 3 is the correct answer.
Answer: getfenv() is a type of function. Particually a envirotment function. for a lua coding.
Explanation: What this does it goes thourgh line of code in a particular order.
This means. getfenv is used to get the current environment of a function. It returns a table of all the things that function has access to. You can also set the environment of a function to another environment.
Forgot to include examples of where this could be used. Although not very common uses, there are some. In the past Script Builders used getfenv to get the environment of a script, and setfenv to set the environment of a created script’s environment to a fake environment, so they couldn’t affect the real one. They could also inject custom global functions.
Not entirely sure if this uses getfenv or setfenv, but the use in Crazyman32’s AeroGameFramework is making the environment of each module have access to other modules without having to require them, and having access to remotes without having to directly reference them.
I would say ten would be the answer