C/C++ :: 5x5 Multiplication Table Starting With The Number Of User Choice?
Feb 23, 2014
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
int n;
int m;
char input[20];
int num;
int main() {
int num0;
[code]....
I'm supposed to write C program that will generate a 5 X 5 multiplication table starting with the number of the users choice. The program is supposed to operate within a loop and run until the user indicates that they no longer wish to enter any more numbers. I can get the program to run but am wondering what I need to do to get the program to ask for another number and how to make the program stop when the user no longer wants to play. Should I start with "Do you want to enter a number" if yes, run back through loop if no, goodbye?
I want to declare a 2D 4*4 array, and fills the array with the multiplication table of an integer x from the user, for example: x*1,x*2,x*3, ....., x*16 and how to pass that array to a function to print the array and to another function that swaps a column with another column chosen by the user.
I would like to print a multiplication table, with the dimension n given as input. I attached how the table looks like for n=7.
How do you output the character "-" in that sequence? The first and last numbers have 13 "-" characters before and after them, but the numbers in between have 8 "-" characters.
This program to find the multiplication table, need explanation this step : printf("%d * %d =%d ", n, i, n*i);
#include <stdio.h> int main() { int n, i; printf("Enter an integer to find multiplication table: "); scanf("%d",&n); for(i=1;i<=10;++i) { printf("%d * %d =%d ", n, i, n*i); } return 0;
i need the output to display the product of every whole number from 1-3 in a table format.
this is the code i have so far. i know some brackets are missing but i just pasted the meat of the code. when i run the program i keep getting the number 1 displayed in a straight line going on forever
This is the question; Write a function that builds a two-dimensional multiplication table with arbitrary sizes for the two dimensions.
This is what I have done. I have allowed the user to input whatever size table they want by arbitrarily choosing what value they can input. However I cannot get the board to have blank squares. I thought the char would do it.
Code: #include <iostream> using namespace std; char SQAURE_CHAR = {' '}; const int Board_Size = 14;
Write a program that prints a multiplication table using nested loops. In main ask the user for the smallest column number , the largest column number and the size of the increment. Ask the user for the same information for the row values.
In the example the column values entered are: 5, 15 and 2 and the row values 3, 6 and 1.
Given those numbers you would generate the following table.
Multiplication Table | 5 7 9 11 13 15 ___|___________________________________ | 3 | 15 21 27 33 39 45 4 | 20 28 36 44 52 60 5 | 25 35 45 55 65 75 6 | 30 42 54 66 78 90 Print the 24 values with the grey background. The other numbers show the values to be multiplied.
Code: #include<stdio.h> main() { int a,b,c,d,e,f; int i,j,total; printf("Please enter smallest column number: "); scanf("%i",&a); printf("
[Code] ....
Challenge: As an added challenge try to print out the column headings (5 7 9 11 13 15) and the row headings (3 4 5 6)
If a user enters a string of boolean algebra it will ouput the table.
I have input parsing, cycling through the combinations, and outputing working. However once i parse the input I am not sure what to do with it. I have thought of having it write the parsed input to a new file as a function and then use that function, but that seems bad.
How to dynamically create the function, how to implement it.
BTW This is a console function, if that changes anything.
Below is a program that generates random Addition for Subtraction problems depending on the user's choice. The user is prompted to input an answer and then it keeps your score. If you want to quit you just press zero.
Code: #include <iostream> #include <stdio.h> #include <stdlib.h> #include <time.h> #include <iomanip> #include <string> using namespace std; int menu(); bool addition(int &reward); // function to return truth values
So the latest challenge from jumping into c++ is as following.
Code: Write a function that builds the multiplication table of arbitrary dimensions This chapter also talks a ton about 2d arrays.
So I've built my program thus far as this.
Code: #include <iostream> using namespace std; int drawTable(int,int); int main()
[Code] .....
So basically, the idea is that I can use the arrays dimensions as a placeholder, and just multiple them to get that specific spot, so table[0][0] = 0, [0][1] = 0 and so on. However the output actually seems to be randomly generated numbers so I'd like to ask, what am I doing wrong? Am I on the right track? Or have I missed the bus stop completely.
And how to rewrite the code so that it display the MySQL table data for a specific user I already have a string called username and that stores the username entered on the login form. I want the code to use the username string to search for the name and display that users info.
My table contents are: username First name Last name Position Employee Id Airline
Write a program to make a table for any input number and then continuesly ask to press y to print more table and if you press any key other than y then program must be terminate using while loop and do while loop. How to start or end with it.
Say I have a class with a few member functions, and only two data members: an int* Table; and an int Size;, to store the number of elements in Table.
I'm using a copy constructor that takes in two parameters: int* table, int size. In this case, is the address that table points to the same address as the object that table is part of? And furthermore, is it possible to say table.Size? I want to compare the passed array's size to the passed size.
I am attempting to write code that receives a number from the user and outputs the largest prime number underneath the user's number. There are no errors in my code, but no matter what number is imputed, the program says the largest prime number is 1. I cannot find where the issue is in the code. Here is the code I wrote:
I am just starting out learning C and I am using MinGW, Widnows 7, and cmd.exe.I am starting from scratch and learning very short and simple programs, like 20 lines long.After I use MinGW (gcc) to compile, the programs start up rather slowly, sometimes up to about 3-5 seconds. One with a big nested loop even took about 15 seconds to load. After they run once, the next time they run, it's instant.
Last time I learned from this book, I don't remember them starting so slowly. I use the command "gcc sample.c -o sample".It just concerns me that these tiny little programs are starting up so slowly. I'm scared it's a problem with my computer or MinGW installation. When I start making more advanced programs, I don't want them running slower than they ought to be.
The following code prevents windows from letting the monitor go into sleep mode when the program is active and wakes the monitor up after a scanner scans something.
When the program is started normally it works fine. But when the program is started from a network share it goes to sleep anyway and the OnScan does not work anymore. Removing the Send Message line makes On Scan work again but then the monitor wont wake up on a scan of course.
What could be the problem here when started from the network?
Below is a snippet of my code in which it loops through a file trying to find the matching record of a selection given by the user. I use tellg() to tell me where the search begins and it does in fact start at the beginning. But when the search actually executes, it starts at the last record, loops once, and ends, as it does not find the matching record (when the user enters '24' for example)
void Hardware::updateExistingRecord(ofstream &addRecordInfo, ifstream &updateRecord, Hardware &_records) { //selection on which field to update enum Field { RECORD_NUMBER = 1, TOOL_NAME, QUANTITY, COST, EXIT }; cout << "Enter record number you would like to update "; cout << "Enter zero to exit ?";
I am trying to create a function to find the entry point of my map.But my program does not seem to be working correctly. I am trying to place a dot there because I will have to use recursion to fill up the whole map. But I'm not asking for the answer. I just need writing a function to locate the starting row for the first column of the maze (first non zero element). My code seems to have a bug in it when I try and call my function FindEntry. What I am trying to do is read in column by column until I can find the starting point and then place a dot there with ASCII character 249. This is my code so far:
I just started learning C and trying to create a program in C that will have a starting menu for a calculator. The problem is that I could do that with a switch/case but the assignment requires me to use if/else.
Here's what I have so far:
Code:
#include <stdio.h> int calc(); int menu(); int main() { printf("Hello. Welcome to the program. "); printf("Press RETURN key to continue...
[Code]...
How should I go from now using if/else to have those 4 choices?
I am having an issue with my sort function. This is one part of the Hash table program. The main issue is that I am trying to sort the pointer table after all of the values have been entered. The ptr_sort function is not a class function and so I am therefore unable to use the class variables psize and pTable. Is there another way I should be trying this? it is a Vector should I use the sort() function from the vector class in STL?
However, if one uses this code over and over, one quickly becomes tired of threading one's way all the way from root directory C:. There is undoubtedly some way to designate a starting directory. The most obvious candidate to set such a target is the:
Code: bi.pidlRoot = NULL;
But attempting to set bi.pidlRoot to a CString (directory address) errors because 'no suiitable conversion from CString to LPCITEMIDLIST exists'
How can I set the code to open at a designated address in the directory tree?