Using switch case in java , write a menu driven program to find the sum of the following series
and display sum for each case:
i) S=1+(1*3) + (1*3*5) + (1*3*5*7) +....................+(1*3*5*7*........*(2n-1))
ii) S=(1/a) + (2/a^3
) + (3/a^5
) + (4/a^7
) + .........................+ (n/a^n)
Answers
Answer:
C++ Programming Tutorial
Introduction to C++ Programming
(for Novices & First-Time Programmers)
1. Getting Started - Write our First Hello-world C++ Program
Let us begin by writing our first C++ program that prints the message "hello, world" on the display console.
Step 1: Write the Source Code: Enter the following source codes using a programming text editor (such as NotePad++ for Windows or gedit for UNIX/Linux/Mac) or an Interactive Development Environment (IDE) (such as CodeBlocks, Eclipse, NetBeans or Visual Studio - Read the respective "How-To" article on how to install and get started with these IDEs).
Do not enter the line numbers (on the left panel), which were added to help in the explanation. Save the source file as "hello.cpp". A C++ source file should be saved with a file extension of ".cpp". You should choose a filename which reflects the purpose of the program.
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/*
* First C++ program that says hello (hello.cpp)
*/
#include <iostream> // Needed to perform IO operations
using namespace std;
int main() { // Program entry point
cout << "hello, world" << endl; // Say Hello
return 0; // Terminate main()
} // End of main function
Step 2: Build the Executable Code: Compile and Link (aka Build) the source code "hello.cpp" into executable code ("hello.exe" in Windows or "hello" in UNIX/Linux/Mac).
On IDE (such as CodeBlocks), push the "Build" button.
On Text editor with the GNU GCC compiler, start a CMD Shell (Windows) or Terminal (UNIX/Linux/Mac) and issue these commands:
// Windows (CMD shell) - Build "hello.cpp" into "hello.exe"
> g++ -o hello.exe hello.cpp
// UNIX/Linux/Mac (Bash shell) - Build "hello.cpp" into "hello"
$ g++ -o hello hello.cpp
where g++ is the name of GCC C++ compiler; -o option specifies the output filename ("hello.exe" for Windows or "hello" for UNIX/Linux/Mac); "hello.cpp" is the input source file.
Step 3: Run the Executable Code: Execute (Run) the program.
On IDE (such as CodeBlocks), push the "Run" button.
On Text Editor with GNU GCC compiler, issue these command from CMD Shell (Windows) or Terminal (UNIX/Linux/Mac):
// Windows (CMD shell) - Run "hello.exe" (.exe is optional)
> hello
hello, world
// UNIX/Linux/Mac (Bash shell) - Run "hello" (./ denotes the current directory)
$ ./hello
hello, world
Brief Explanation of the Program
/* ...... */
// ... until the end of the line
These are called comments. Comments are NOT executable and are ignored by the compiler; but they provide useful explanation and documentation to your readers (and to yourself three days later). There are two kinds of comments:
Multi-line Comment: begins with /* and ends with */. It may span more than one lines (as in Lines 1-3).
End-of-line Comment: begins with // and lasts until the end of the current line (as in Lines 4, 7, 8, 9 and 10).