Think of this situation like triage. For instance,
- There are questions which will be bad regardless of the edits made to it.
- There are questions which will be good regardless of the edits made to it.
- There are questions which edits will make a positive difference for it if applied.
This is one of those cases that the question will always be bad. Let's walk through how.
First, this is the only thing written in the question:
THIS GIVE ERROR HOW TO RESOLE PLEASE EXPLAI IT EASILY BECAUSE I AM A NEW PROGRAMMER
Ignoring the caps, here's what we know:
- The code gives an error
- They don't understand what the error actually is
- They want us to explain what the error is
That's closeable as "too broad" on any given day by itself.
Now, to the code they "attached". This is reproduced as closely as I can do the original format:
#include<stdio.h>
int main( )
{
int a, b, c, sum ;
printf ( "\nEnter any three numbers " ) ;
scanf ( "%d %d %d", &a, &b, &c ) ;
sum = calsum ( a, b, c) ;
printf ( "\nSum = %d", sum );
}
calsum( x, y, z )
int x, y, z ;
{
int d;
d = x + y + z;
return ( d );
}
Doesn't look like it's going to compile which means this is a compilation error, and a fairly basic one at that. Most editors would inform you of this and the compiler would also tell you what's going on. I'll admit though that I get different errors from this code than I would from the OP, but that doesn't mean that the question is redeemable because of it.
Questions should get some kind of grace period to improve themselves, which is what closing it does. This question can't be improved regardless of who edits it.