Wiki User
∙ 14y agoA variable must be in place of a number, or representing a range of possible values. Otherwise, it is a constant and so yous imply replace it with the value of that constant.
Wiki User
∙ 14y agoNo. An integer is a WHOLE number. A number with a decimal place or a fraction is not an integer :)
No. Any number that has a decimal place is not an integer. Even if the decimal place is ".0".
A variable
It is integer or plural which is integers.
Yes, it is.
No. An integer is a WHOLE number. A number with a decimal place or a fraction is not an integer :)
No. Any number that has a decimal place is not an integer. Even if the decimal place is ".0".
variable
A variable
That's a dependent variable, I believe.
Coefficients are the numbers directly in front of a variable. Variables are letters in place of numbers in a mathematical problem . For example the expression, "2x" has a variable and a coefficient. The variable is the letter x, and the coefficient is the number 2. The coefficient is NEVER a letter, and is always a number. Coefficients and variables can be used in both scientific and algebraic expressions.
variable
A variable.
It is integer or plural which is integers.
You can certainly do that ... printf ("This is a number: 12345\n"); ... but that does not have the same value as placing the value in a variable and converting the variable into a string ... int i = 12345; printf ("This is a number: %d\n", i); That's the whole point of format specifiers - to initiate a conversion from one place to another.
It is a number with an integer part which has two or more.
a variable