C language question

Asked 2 years ago, Updated 2 years ago, 22 views

c++

2022-09-20 19:39

2 Answers

I've been thinking about it, but I was a little rude. First of all, I apologize for that, and I'll rewrite my thoughts a little bit and send them to you.

Yesterday, I asked you this and that through 1:1 chat (to be exact, open comments). Why do you think an arrangement should be written in the first place, why do you think we should combine the three and the question mark after that? I really didn't mean to say anything about it. (If you're going to do that, why did you ask 20 questions in a complicated way?))

Actually, I wanted to know exactly. If you "understood array grammar," you can start this problem to some extent, but I wonder why you say you can't even start it, how far do you know exactly? Isn't it okay to do that on the site where developers come and go? Once I know the answer, the problem is that you define two arrays with indexes from 0 to 4, and then you go around the while infinite loop, take input, analyze it, calculate it, and print it out. I expect exactly that much for the questioner. Of course. That's about it. He said, "I don't know because I'm not the presenter," so I gave up because I thought it would be useless to ask 20 questions from there.

Because I'm a little bit like that. I'm also a non-SW major like you. I got a bachelor's degree in philosophy that is not helpful for employment, but before and after that, I accidentally made a website and went through various processes, and now I make a living by developing the web. Then one day, I logged in here and looked around to see a homework "Question" posted, and I saw a comment saying, "I'm not sure because I'm a SW non-major." I don't know if you can imagine my position, but I had nothing to do and I couldn't let it go.

Why? What do you mean? If I'm a non-major, should I not know? Isn't it something you can do if you learn, try, and debug until you can?

That's how coding works. In most cases, nothing is impossible in the computing world It just needs resources and time. If so, the desirable basic attitude of a coding learner is to study how to achieve what is somehow possible and repeat trial and error. In short, you hold on to the machine and do something until it works. The worst posture is exactly the opposite, holding a person without doing anything and expecting him to be something. And I've looked over and over again at the three posts you posted and deleted, and the three remaining posts, but you don't seem to have tried anything. He said he didn't know because he was a non-SW major. Like I never thought there would be a SW non-major to read it, as if it could defend your lack of effort and inappropriate attitude.

So you're like, "What do you want me to do? So here are two options that you can do. One is to look for a businessman to do homework for you. It costs some money, but it's easy and fast and most of all, no one will "ㄹ"" you. Kmong is recommended. What is the other one? You have to do that homework yourself. You learned about the arrangement, right? How to receive something, how to print it out, how to multiply numbers by numbers and store them in variables. Please do something with it. And put the code up here. And ask me again. "I had this and that problem, so I coded it one way or another, and I thought A would come out, and B came out. Why is that? How can I get an A?"This is the default format for asking developers about code. If you didn't know, you can do that next time.

You've offended the questioner by being short and cheeky about what should be written like this. I'm sorry about that and I'm asking you a serious question again.

So, what exactly is the "question" in this questionnaire? What did you try? Where did you get stuck?


2022-09-20 19:39

If you're going to keep picking on me, or if you're going to teach me, just leave I can't believe you're doing this to a non-major like me when you don't have much to doLOL


2022-09-20 19:39

If you have any answers or tips


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