Language dependent. In C, for example, there no string as such, but you can use function strcat to concatenate zero-terminated character-sequences.
Concatenate in MS Excel and most of other tool is function to join text.
a write the algorithm to concatenate two given string
The concatenate key is simply the combination of several columns in a table, which serves the unique key of that table.
I don't use that function in C programme.
Language dependent. In C, for example, there no string as such, but you can use function strcat to concatenate zero-terminated character-sequences.
Concatenate in MS Excel and most of other tool is function to join text.
Concatenating is joining bits of data together, like two separate pieces of text into one piece. There is a function called CONCATENATE or you can use the & symbol. Both of these will do the same thing: =CONCATENATE( "ABC" , "DEF" ) ="ABC" & "DEF"
v can concatenate two string by using a function like: select CONCAT( CONCAT('ename','e_mrks'),"name","marks" from student;
You can use the Concatenate function or the & operator. Both of the following will result in the same thing: =CONCATENATE("abc","def") ="abc" & "def"
No. It joins data within a cell.
You can concatenate using the & operator. So say you have a firstname of a person in cell B2 and their surname in cell C2 and in D2 you want to display their first name, a space and their surname together, you would do this: =B2 & " " & C2 You could also use the CONCATENATE function to do the same thing: =CONCATENATE(B2," ",C2)
You can concatenate text either using the CONCATENATE function or the & operator. If you had text in cell A2 and cell B2 that you wanted to add together in another cell you could do it in either of these ways: =A2 & B2 =CONCATENATE(A2,B2)
Copy one file, then append the other to the copy.
Normally yes, but it will actually take numbers and combine them into a text string.
If you used the CONCATENATE function then there's a limit to the number of arguments which is Excel version dependent. Excel 2007 and newer versions allow 255 arguments, all older versions allow 30 arguments. You don't need to use the CONCATENATE function. You can use the & operator to concatenate instead. =A1&", "&B1&", "&C1 Using this method you're only limited by the allowable maximum length for a formula which, again, is version dependent. Excel 2007 and newer versions allow 8192 characters, all older versions allow 1024 characters. You could also concatenate the results of several concatenate formulas in a new formula.
strcat if u wnt to use strcat then include string.h header file