They are arranged the way they are because of the QWERTY layout. It was used to slow down how people typed so they wouldn't get the typewriter jammed. Hope this helps. :)
<span>Her liabilities are her credit card bill and her car loan. These are things that she owes and has to pay off, so they are liabilities due to the fact that she owes for these items. Her bonds, piano, bank account, and bicycle are counted as assets.</span>
Answer:
zeroIt(&x);
Explanation:
The statement that sets the value stored in x to zero by invoking the function zerolt is given below
zeroIt(&x);
The zeroIt function is also given below for better understanding.
void zeroIt(int *x) {
*x = 0;
}
As seen, the function takes an argument with integer variable type, which is a pointer, denoted by the asterisk symbol (*x).
The ampersan sign (&x) is used to access the variable whose value can then be stored.
Answer:
Explanation:
The following code was written in Java. The code contains the Employee class which contains the two variables (name, salary), the constructor, getter and setter methods for both variables, and an overwritten toString method. It also contains a tester class with the main method inside and creates a Employee object and initializes it. Then it calls the toString method. The output can be seen in the attached image below. Due to technical difficulties I have added the code as a txt file below.