answer is correct
You cannot directly associate a route table with a virtual network (VNet) or a network interface card (NIC). Route tables are applied at the subnet level, and all resources within that subnet will follow the routes defined in the associated route table
No, you cannot directly assign a route table to a network interface (NIC) in Azure. Route tables in Azure are associated at the subnet level, not the NIC level. All network interfaces within a subnet inherit the routing rules defined by the route table associated with that subnet.
Given answer Subnet1 only is right.
You can only associate a route table to subnets in virtual networks that exist in the same Azure location and subscription as the route table.
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/virtual-network/manage-route-table
You can associate zero, or one, network security group to each subnet and network interface in a virtual machine. The same network security group can be associated to as many subnets and network interfaces as you choose.
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/virtual-network/network-security-group-how-it-works
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