A battery loses its charge over time. You need a new battery.
Your laptop is unable to charge because of a problem with your adapter or the battery itself; try plugging out the battery and returning.
depends on the how u maintain the laptop and don't charge the battery for hours to gether when ever it necessary keep the charge >
The problem is the Laptop is faling to charge the battery (state the obvious!) 1) Either the charging circuit has failed, or the connection to the battery or 2) The battery has failed How old is the laptop? if still under warranty return it to the vendor or better take it and get them to try a replacement battery in it. Or take it somewhere 'friendly' where the same laptop is sold and get them to check it out Has the battery any charge indicators on it if you remove if from the laptop? Do they light up if the battery is totally flat they won't Has anyone you know with a laptop got the same battery in it, swap the batteries if so and see if it charges.
No
No It will give the laptop an overload and will wreck your laptop. Do not do it.
If it is a desktop, no. If it is a laptop, yes, it has a battery and you charge it in the wall.
The way to stop your laptop from charging is to unplug the charger from the computer. When the battery starts to get low on power plug it back in.
No, It is not recommended to charge the laptop battery yourself. Laptop batteries require specific charging circuits and power sources. Attempting to charge it manually can be dangerous and may damage the battery or the laptop. Always use the manufacturer's recommended charger and follow their instructions for proper charging.
Your battery will lose charge faster.
Most likely because you have left your laptop on charge constantly without it needing charge causing the battery within the laptop to become instable. (basically replace the battery)
No, the charge in the battery is a change in state of the battery contents, not an addition to the battery.