a teenager
A student with a mass of 90 kg on the earth (gravity =9.8m/s/s) will have a weight of 882 Newtons. Weight = Mass * Gravity
The probability is indeterminate. I might ask a student or I might not.
If a student had a mass of 195 kg, then his weight on earth was 1,911 newtons, or about 430 pounds.
By working for it.
sure it is, as a grade seven student I use fantastic all the time :)
The weigh of an average seventh grade student is approximately fifty kilograms.
it depends on your subject. O.o
The following example sets up a two-dimensional array, initialises it with some pseudo-random data, and then prints the table and the averages. #include<iostream> #include<time.h> int main() { const int max_students = 7; const int max_student_grades = 5; const int max_grades = 6; const char grade[max_grades]={'A','B','C','D','E','F'}; srand((unsigned) time(NULL)); // Initialise the array with pseudo-random grades: int table[max_students][max_student_grades]; for(int student=0; student<max_students; ++student) { for(int student_grade=0; student_grade<max_student_grades; ++student_grade) { table[student][student_grade] = rand()%max_grades; } } // Print the table and average the results. int overall=0; for(int student=0; student<max_students; ++student) { int average=0; std::cout<<"Student #"<<student+1; for(int student_grade=0; student_grade<max_student_grades; ++student_grade) { std::cout<<" Grade #"<<student_grade+1<<": "<<grade[table[student][student_grade]]<<", "; average+=table[student][student_grade]; } std::cout<<" Average: "<<grade[average/max_grades]<<std::endl; overall+=average; } std::cout<<"Overall average: "<<grade[overall/max_grades/max_students]<<std::endl; return(0); } Example output: Student #1 Grade #1: A, Grade #2: E, Grade #3: D, Grade #4: E, Grade #5: F, Average: C Student #2 Grade #1: E, Grade #2: D, Grade #3: E, Grade #4: E, Grade #5: E, Average: D Student #3 Grade #1: D, Grade #2: A, Grade #3: D, Grade #4: B, Grade #5: A, Average: B Student #4 Grade #1: C, Grade #2: B, Grade #3: A, Grade #4: A, Grade #5: B, Average: A Student #5 Grade #1: E, Grade #2: D, Grade #3: C, Grade #4: F, Grade #5: E, Average: D Student #6 Grade #1: C, Grade #2: D, Grade #3: A, Grade #4: F, Grade #5: A, Average: B Student #7 Grade #1: B, Grade #2: D, Grade #3: F, Grade #4: B, Grade #5: C, Average: C Overall average: C
Xstudent = mass of a student
Yes, it is possible for a sixth grade advanced student to achieve a higher grade than a seventh grade basic student. Grades are based on individual performance and understanding of the material, so a dedicated and high-achieving student in a lower grade level can outperform a student in a higher grade with less proficiency.
if you are from grade 7 our lady of grace student hi my name is patrick the special
By calculating the average grade a student earned in school
No. it's not necessary. It should be --- He is a fourth grade student.
enum field { name, course, grade }; std::string student[3]; student[name] = "Joe Bloggs"; student[course] = "C++ Programming"; student[grade] = "A+";
I don't know A 3rd grade student I don't know A 3rd grade student
I am a straight 'A' student. I am a straight A student.