When evaluating order of operations like a problem x = a + (b - c) / (d - e * f). Do you evaluate left to right or right to left? Thanks for your time guys.
-Will
Type: Posts; User: C-Duddley
When evaluating order of operations like a problem x = a + (b - c) / (d - e * f). Do you evaluate left to right or right to left? Thanks for your time guys.
-Will
Use return(); for type void functions. Sometimes picky compilers make you do that.
-Will
You nailed it!! That's what I suspected, but I just wasn't sure. Thanks for clearing that up. I just don't like things to be black boxes, if you know what I mean :).
-CDudd
I have been playing around with XOR and I'm just curious as to how it works. I don't mean the TRUTH Table thing. Here's an example. A and B characters have an ascii value of 65 and 66...
And please could it be in english ;). I gotta hear it in plain english before I can understand it in geekspeak :).
-CDuddley
Nevermind figured it out :).
-CDuddley
Is there a way to search through strings to look for a match with a constant string? I'm trying to make a bot. I was thinking chop up the string at every space and see if the string you're...
Thanks a bunch man :)...
-CDuddley
main()
{
int x = 10, y = 0;
y = ++x; // sets x and y to 11
y = x++; /* sets x = 11 and y = 10 because x is passed to y before it is incremented */
return 0;
If you have an array can you allocate it to a certain amount then if the user fills up the array can you use malloc to adjust the array to add more elements if needed? Thanks for any replies.
...
Why not use a different function for the subtraction of the entered date. Say date_substraction(int *, int *, int *);...
-CDuddley