I looked through your downvoted questions.
I don’t think this is an altogether bad question. You clearly have tried something and provided the code you tried. I personally wouldn’t upvote it, but I don’t think it deserves a downvote either.
That said, I was able to find the answer with a little searching. I’m not sure what query you were using, but when I searched DuckDuckGo with the query R modulus, the fourth result was a message on the R-help mailing list asking whether such an operator existed. The second reply included the answer, %%
.
This one is a little more problematic. You have described what you’re trying to do, but I don’t see an attempt at a solution. You have this plea in your question:
I could do the job easily in other languages. But for this exercise, I need a Python script. Please help me to write a script ready for use. Sorry if this sounds like a careless request. I do know programming, the trouble here is that I don't know anything about Python.
Okay, maybe I’m a little sympathetic, but that doesn’t change the standards of questions on Stack Overflow. It may be a little daunting trying to learn a new language and perform a task, but it’s not really appropriate to ask for a full solution here. It may help to break the problem down. You say you had experience in other programming languages, so you might figure out the general flow that applies to implementations in nearly any language:
- Get a command line argument.
- Parse the command line argument into a float.
- Format the float with a thousands separator.
- Print a string.
Or something like that, at least. Then you could look into each of the steps individually, for which you might find documentation or other resources online, or you might have to ask a question for.
General tips
I was thinking about linking to Jon Skeet’s reference on writing a good question, but skimming through the headings and a little bit of the text there, I think you’ve done a reasonable job on those fronts. I think what users here are looking for in those questions is a little more research. A lot of your questions have been well-received, though, and you should be proud of that. You might consider looking for differences between the well-received and not-so-well-received questions you’ve asked, and trying to make your future questions (and possibly editing your downvoted questions) more like the well-received ones.
r modulo
was this one. Then when you are defeated, carefully compose an SO post.