王豹 wrote: > Hello,everyone I am a new learner in C-progromming . > > When I do exercise ,it comes to turn decimal into binary, octary, > hexadecimal, I could turn it into binary, octary, and hexadecimal except > A,B,C,D,E,F, thus I can't turn 10 into A........ > > I wonder if someone who could help me,Thank you very much!
If you wish to receive an answer to your question, you need to show us what you have done so far. Show us that you have made an effort - source code, Google queries, something, anything. If you are truly stumped, then describe in detail what exactly you don't understand. > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] (Perhaps this was source code that you attached? The "effort" described in the previous paragraph?) Due to several historical incidents involving computer viruses on c-prog, the group-wide policy of disallowing attachments to messages was instantiated by the c-prog group owner, Thomas Hruska (me). The simplest workaround to not having attachments is to just copy and paste the code directly into an e-mail. Doing it that way helps keep the conversation inline and actually encourages more responses from group members. Therefore, for garnering high-quality, timely responses from group members, it is in your best interest to use copy and paste. Some mail clients have difficulty transporting C/C++ code over the Internet. Most clients that have problems are webmail-oriented. The easiest and most friendly way to interact with c-prog is to use a dedicated e-mail client such as Outlook or Thunderbird and set your c-prog group settings to individual e-mails. Most webmail providers have instructions for setting up various popular dedicated e-mail clients. Additionally, unlike your personal e-mail, you have to contend with thousands of other users who are using all sorts of e-mail and webmail clients. If you set your outgoing e-mails to be plain-text and use bottom posting for your replies, your e-mails will have a higher level of readership than those who top-post and use HTML/Word e-mail. Should you still feel the need to upload a file, the c-prog website has a 'Files' section that periodically gets cleared out to make room for more files. You may upload your file there and reference it in your e-mails. Just be sure to specify which file it is you want people to be looking at in the e-mail. This approach garners fewer responses. Fewer people will put forth the significant effort necessary to view the file. Also, due to the nature of computer viruses, people will generally only open plain-text files instead of Word documents. Uploading a Word document is a guaranteed method of not getting any response. -- Thomas Hruska CubicleSoft President Ph: 517-803-4197 *NEW* MyTaskFocus 1.1 Get on task. Stay on task. http://www.CubicleSoft.com/MyTaskFocus/
