> 2. The following program fragments illustrate the logical operators. Show the output produced by each, assuming that `i`, `j`, and `k` are `int` variables. a. `i = 10; j = 5;` ```c printf("%d", !i < j); // Expected output: `1`, because `!i` evaluates to 0, and 0 is less than 5, so that expression evaluates to true, or 1. ``` b. `i = 2; j = 1;` ```c printf("%d", !!i + !j); // Expected output: `1`, because !!2 evaluates to 1, and !j evaluates to 0 ``` c. `i = 5; j = 0; k = -5;` ```c printf("%d", i && j || k); // Expected output: `1`, because i && j should evaluate to 0, but `0 || 1` should evalulate to true. ``` d. `i = 1; j = 2; k = 3;` ```c printf("%d", i < j || k); // Expected output: `1` ``` > 4. Write a single expression whose value is either `-1`, `0`, or `1` depending on whether `i` is less than, equal to, or greater than `j`, respectively. ```c /* If i < j, the output should be -1. If i == j, the output should be zero If i > j, the output should be 1. */ (i > j) - (i < j) ``` > 6. Is the following `if` statement legal? ```c if (n >= 1 <= 10) printf("n is between 1 and 10\n"); ``` Yes the statement is *legal*, but it does not produce the intended effect. It would produce an output when `n` is zero because `0 >= 1` would evaluate to `0`, and `0 <= 10` is false.