Lets just start with (A)
When you have 45.0L of methane and 45L of water, look at your equation. To react completely you need twice as much water as methane. You only have equal amount. Now, you can reason out that because I only have half of the reactant quantity of water required, I will only get half of the products.
Or, you can divide your stoichmetric coefficients by whatever it takes to get your limiting reagent to unity (1). That is, if you divide all those coefficients by 2 in this case (because 2/2 will get you 1), you get:
½ methane +1 water=1/2 carbon dioxide +2 hydrogen. So you are starting off with the 45L of water as the limiting reagent, and just multiply it by the products levelized stoichmetric coefficients to determine the quantity of product.
(B) Again, water vapor is your limiting reagent, you do not have twice as much of it as.
Again, make the stoichmetric coefficient in front of the limiting reagent 1 (same as in A, and multiply the amount of limiting reagent by the stoichmetric coefficient of the product)
C is the same, but the limiting reagent is now the methane.
Note, the answer for B is wrong, it is 32.5L of methane and 132 L of water.
*edit*
I feel is if that explanation is confusing/not worded very well. If it is I can try and explain it in a different/better way.