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01:27
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Q: how can fix The system cannot find the file specified at visual studio 2022

aster disThis is the old picture, not as same as the code below. #include<stdio.h> #include<conio.h> #include <math.h> int main(void) { int num, lower, upper; double squareroot; int square; int cube; // input value do { printf("the lower value limit...

Look at the errors in the output window. It seems the code has compilation errors. There is a typo pritnf instead of printf. For further help, please provide the code and error messages as text and not screen shots.
i already added
And what about the obvious error in the code pointed out in the previous comment? You have not provided any response to that.
got it, the program is working right now
In the screenshot, is the entire "Output" window visible? Or can you scroll up to display more error messages? Please post the entire content of the output window into the question as text. You can keep the screenshot in the question though, as it may be useful.
01:27
i post a new program has same problem, could help me take a look
Please provide the full Output window log. As text.
sorry, i didn't get what window
u mean after debuging
Bottom left hand corner window in your screen shot. That's where it shows any build errors.
the error list?
Build started... 1>------ Build started: Project: item2, Configuration: Debug x64 ------ 1>Source.c 1>C:\Users\86377\source\repos\assignment2\item2\Source.c(28)‌​: error C4700: uninitialized local variable 'num' used 1>Done building project "item2.vcxproj" -- FAILED. ========== Build: 0 succeeded, 1 failed, 0 up-to-date, 0 skipped ==========
@asterdis: Yes, please post that text into the question, in a code block, with a short description. You should state that this is the content of the output window.
01:27
Suggest you learn to read the build log for errors. Seems pretty clear: uninitialized local variable 'num' used
but i already int num:
Perhaps you should pause programming and go thru a basic C book/tutorial. Do you understand what "initialization" means? It means assigning a value to the variable. Where in your code do you set num?
After your most recent edit, your posted code no longer corresponds to the code in the screenshot. Please make sure that the information in the screenshot corresponds to your posted code, otherwise you will be confusing people.
at beginning i int num, lower, upper:
No, that declares a variable but does not set its value. You need to assign a value with = or scanf into that variable or some other way to actually set the value.
01:27
should i int num = 0?
Can't answer that question as you are the one writing the code and you haven't told us what the program is trying to do and what num is supposed to be. It needs to be set to whatever value your program requires it to be. Or read from user input. Or whatever the required logic is to solve the problem you are addressing.
so the num is asking the user to input and then the num be calculated by square root, square and cube
You already have code that asks for user input. So what stops you from doing the same for num?
@asterdis: Writing int num = 0 should get rid of the error message, yes. So your code should compile afterwards. However, your program will not work as intended. See this answer to your previous question for the working code. However, you will have to apply the fix that I mentioned in the comments section (move one printf line outside the loop) for it to work properly. Here is my link to my working demonstration that I also posted as a comment to the answer.
thanks you guys helping, the program is working right now :)
01:27
In my opinion, your question in its current state is of low quality. Your screenshot does not correspond to the posted code, so that the question is unclear. Meanwhile, you have edited your question to mark the screenshot as old. However, this is not sufficient. If the screenshot is no longer relevant to the question, then you should delete it. If it is still relevant, then you should explain inside the question itself (not in the comments section) what relevance the screenshot has.

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