The answer depends on what information you have from which you wish to calculate time.
It depends on the building code of your country
You would have a very tough time, because that isn't the formula to calculate work. (distance) divided by (time) is the formula to calculate speed. The formula to calculate work is: (force) multiplied by (distance).
time=distance divided by speed
to calculate your average handling time: average talk time+after callwork+hold time divided by the number of calls
Well, as we know that several processes are running in the background, roughly we can calculate the bust time by saving the time stamp before running the actual code at the local variable as well as final time stamp just after the actual code and find the difference.
no i can not
I never heard of a "code length"; please clarify.
The answer depends on what information you have from which you wish to calculate time.
Alan Spain how do i get my car radio code
how do you calculate your ira on tax time how do you pat taxes on a ira
You can calculate the longitude of a place when time is given using the Greenwich solar time.
It depends on the building code of your country
Functions are used to reduce the lines of code and the complexity of the code. For an instance let us suppose that you want to calculate the factorial of numbers at different times in a program. There are two ways to do this 1. Write a 4-5 line code every time you want to calculate factorial. 2. Write a function of 4-5 lines which calculates the factorial and call that function every time you need to calculate factorial by just writing a single line. In C++ you can pass the variable, address of the variable or a reference to the variable in a function
Time+Time+Time/3=Avarage time.
You would have a very tough time, because that isn't the formula to calculate work. (distance) divided by (time) is the formula to calculate speed. The formula to calculate work is: (force) multiplied by (distance).
5RC