Answer:
(a): The base case: if(n<1)
(b): The recursive statement: recur(n / 5)
(c): Parameter 10 returns 7
Explanation:
Given
The above code segment
Solving (a): The base case:
The base case is that, which is used to stop the recursion. i.e. when the condition of the base case is true, the function is stopped.
In the given code, the base case is:
if(n<1)
Solving (b): The recursive statement:
The recursive statement is the statement within the function which calls the function.
In the given code, the recursive statement is:
recur(n / 5)
Solving (c): A call to recur() using 10
The base case is first tested
if (n < 1); This is false because 10 > 1
So, the recursive statement is executed
recur(n/5) +2=> recur(10/5)+2 => recur(2)+2
2 is passed to the function, and it returns 2
if (n < 1); This is false because 2 > 1
So, the recursive statement is executed
recur(n/5) +2=> recur(2/5)+2 => recur(0)+2
2 is passed to the function, and it returns 2
if (n < 1); This is true because 0 < 1
This returns 3
So, the following sum is returned
Returned values = 2 + 2 + 3
Returned values = 7
Page Setup options are important for printing a PowerPoint presentation a certain way. The button for the Page Setup dialog box is found in the
File tab.
Home tab.
Design tab.
Slide Show tab.
Answer: Design tab
Explanation:
The page setup simply refers to the parameters which are defined by a particular user which is vital in knowing how a printed page will appear. It allows user to customize the page layout. The parameters include size, page orientation, quality of print,margin etc.
It should be noted that page setup options are vital for printing a PowerPoint presentation in a certain way and the button for the Page Setup dialog box can be found in the design tab.
Which work habits should you follow to increase work efficiency and avoid health issues?
Answer:
Just get good sleep, eat breakfast, and exercise.
Answer:
take periodic breaks and alternate between tasks
What’s unique about windows 8 compared to earlier windows
what connect webpages?
Answer:
"Hypertext links are those words that take you from one web page to another when you click them with your mouse. Although the same HTML tag you study in this hour is also used to make graphical images into clickable links, graphical links aren't explicitly discussed here" I got this from https://www.informit.com/articles/article.aspx?p=440289 sorry I couldnt take the time myself here to help :(
Explanation:
A line beginning with a # will be transmitted to the programmer’s social media feed.
A.
True
B.
False
Answer:
True?
Explanation:
Answer:
The answer is false.
Explanation:
A “#” doesn’t do that in Python.
write the C program
The function turn_to_letter decides on the letter grade of the student according to the table below from the visa and final grades sent into it and returns it, write it together with a main function which the turn_to_letter function is called and prints the letter equivalent on the screen. -Success score = 40% of midterm + 60% of final,
-F for the success score below 50, D for between 50 and 59, C for between 60 and 69, B for between 70 and 79, A for 80 and above.
Answer:
The program in C is as follows:
#include <stdio.h>
char turn_to_letter(double score){
char lettergrade = 'A';
if(score>=80){ lettergrade = 'A'; }
else if(score>=70){ lettergrade = 'B'; }
else if(score>=60){ lettergrade = 'C'; }
else if(score>=50){ lettergrade = 'D'; }
else{lettergrade = 'F';}
return lettergrade;
}
int main(){
int midterm, final;
double score;
printf("Midterm: "); scanf("%d", &midterm);
printf("Final: "); scanf("%d", &final);
score = 0.4 * midterm + 0.6 * final;
printf("Score: %lf\n", score);
printf("Letter Grade: %c",turn_to_letter(score));
return 0;
}
Explanation:
The function begins here
char turn_to_letter(double score){
This initializes lettergrade to A
char lettergrade = 'A';
For scores above or equal to 80, grade is A
if(score>=80){ lettergrade = 'A'; }
For scores above or equal to 70, grade is B
else if(score>=70){ lettergrade = 'B'; }
For scores above or equal to 60, grade is C
else if(score>=60){ lettergrade = 'C'; }
For scores above or equal to 50, grade is D
else if(score>=50){ lettergrade = 'D'; }
Grade is F for other scores
else{lettergrade = 'F';}
This returns the letter grade
return lettergrade;
}
The main begins here
int main(){
This declares the midterm and final scores as integer
int midterm, final;
This declares the total score as double
double score;
These get input for midterm score
printf("Midterm: "); scanf("%d", &midterm);
These get input for final score
printf("Final: "); scanf("%d", &final);
This calculates the total score
score = 0.4 * midterm + 0.6 * final;
This prints the calculated total score
printf("Score: %lf\n", score);
This calls the turn_to_letter function and prints the returned letter grade
printf("Letter Grade: %c",turn_to_letter(score));
return 0;
}
a) Why is eavesdropping done in a network?
b) Solve the following using checksum and check the data at the
receiver:
01001101
00101000
Answer:
An eavesdropping attack is the theft of information from a smartphone or other device while the user is sending or receiving data over a network.
Missing: checksum 01001101 00101000
Code.org lesson 8 level 5
Answer:
and?
Explanation:
Python program
You are given the following text file called Mytext.txt. Write a Python function called search_file that accepts the name of the file (i.e. filename) and a string to look for in the file (i.e. mystring) as parameters. The function then looks for mystring in the file. Whenever it finds the string in a line, it saves the line number and the text for that line in a dictionary. Finally, it returns the dictionary after reading all the lines in the file and populating the dictionary with all matching line numbers and line text. If an empty string or a blank string is passed as mystring then an empty dictionary is returned.
Sample Input: search_file("Mytext.txt","python")
Sample Input: search_file("Mytext.txt","")
Contents of Mytext.txt
Python is an interpreted, high-level, programming language.
Python is dynamically typed and garbage-collected.
Python was conceived in the late 1980s.
Python 2.0, was released in 2000.
Python 3.0, was released in 2008.
The interpreters are available for many operating systems.
Answer:
The function in Python is as follows:
def search_file(filename,mystring):
my_dict = {}
count = 0
file = open(filename)
lines = file.readlines()
for line in lines:
count+=1
if mystring.lower() in line.lower():
my_dict[count] = line.rstrip('\n')
return my_dict
Explanation:
This defines the function
def search_file(filename,mystring):
This initializes an empty dictionary
my_dict = {}
This initializes the number of lines to 0
count = 0
This opens the file
file = open(filename)
This reads the lines of the file
lines = file.readlines()
This iterates through the lines
for line in lines:
This increments the number line
count+=1
This checks if the string exists in the line
if mystring.lower() in line.lower():
If yes, the line number and the string are added to the dictionary
my_dict[count] = line.rstrip('\n')
This returns the dictionary
return my_dict
3.4 code practice question 2 edhesive
Factory Design Pattern Assignment This assignment will give you practice in using the Factory/Abstract Factory Design Pattern. You are going to create a Terraforming program. What does terraform mean
Answer:
Terraform is an open-source infrastructure as code software tool that enables you to safely and predictably create, change, and improve infrastructure.
There used to be a popular type of pulp book for younger readers. They were called "Choose Your Own Adventure" novels. The idea was pretty simple. You'd start reading and then a few pages into the book, there would be a plot development that required a choice. The book might describe that you've entered a spooky house and the door has locked behind you. It would then ask you if you want to try to exit by going through the kitchen or exploring upstairs. If you chose to go into the kitchen, you'd turn to page 200, if you chose to go upstairs, you'd turn to page 43. This would repeat maybe five or six times though the book. You could re-read it a few times and try different outcomes.
In this lab you are going to create a choose your own adventure application using navigation controllers. The introduction screen to your application will contain a few lines of text to set up a story and then leave the user with a choice. Below the text, you will present two buttons that correspond to the different choices.
For example, you might see the following text on the main screen:
You are walking down the street when a tiger runs up and takes your lunch and then runs away...
Do you want to chase the tiger or run away?
Chase
Run Away
The user must then tap one of the buttons. This will move the user to a new screen with a few more lines of the story and another choice and two more buttons. You will create three (3) turning points in your story. This means that your story will have eight (8) different possible outcomes and a total of 15 screens.
Requirements
The story must ask three (3) questions, no matter how the user answers the previous question. All the questions must be different and result in a different story text.
The story must have eight (8) possible different final outcomes.
The story must include a minimum of 15 screens in total.
Create content that is appropriate and not-offensive. We will share these and play them together.
For extra credit you can add an extra screen and use inputs to capture data from the user such as a name, favorite food, or lucky number and use this data in the story.
Answer:
click on the link
Explanation:
link is somewhere hidden
what does this mean on a tamagotchi lol (this is the hello kitty one)
I don't have that tamagotchi
But I do have 2 tamagotchi's
I think it's a cherry on your tamagotchi
Hoped this helped!
Have a wonderful day-
Which line of code will use the overloaded multiplication operation?
class num:
def __init__(self,a):
self.number = a
def __add__(self,b):
return self.number + 2 * b.number
def __mul__(self, b):
return self.number + b.number
def __pow__(self, b):
return self.number + b.number
# main program
numA = num(5)
numB = num(10)
Which line of code will use the overloaded multiplication operation?
class num:
def __init__(self,a):
self.number = a
def __add__(self,b):
return self.number + 2 * b.number
def __mul__(self, b):
return self.number + b.number
def __pow__(self, b):
return self.number + b.number
# main program
numA = num(5)
numB = num(10)
a) product = numA * numB
b) product = numA.multiply(numB)
c) product = numA.mul(numB
For multiplication one: product = numA * numB
For the addition: result = numA + numB
got 100 on this ez
(searched all over internet and no one had the answer lul hope this helps!)
Answer: First option: product = numA * numB
second option-numA + numB
Explanation:
Which of the following is not the disadvantage of closed
network model?
Select one:
O Flexibility
O Public network connection
O Support
O External access
Answer:
public network connection
Answer:
public network connection
Which tab should you click if you want to access the Show All Comments option in a worksheet?
Home
Page Layout
Review
View
Answer: Review
Because you want to review the comments
Answer:
C.) Reivew
Explanation:
Doing it on EDG now!
Best luck to yall :3
Have a good day and byee
You have been given an encrypted copy of the Final exam study guide here, but how do you decrypt and read it???
Along with the encrypted copy, some mysterious person has also given you the following documents:
helloworld.txt -- Maybe this file decrypts to say "Hello world!". Hmmm.
hints.txt -- Seems important.
In a file called pa11.py write a method called decode(inputfile,outputfile). Decode should take two parameters - both of which are strings. The first should be the name of an encoded file (either helloworld.txt or superdupertopsecretstudyguide.txt or yet another file that I might use to test your code). The second should be the name of a file that you will use as an output file. For example:
decode("superDuperTopSecretStudyGuide.txt" , "translatedguide.txt")
Your method should read in the contents of the inputfile and, using the scheme described in the hints.txt file above, decode the hidden message, writing to the outputfile as it goes (or all at once when it is done depending on what you decide to use).
Hint: The penny math lecture is here.
Another hint: Don't forget about while loops...
Answer:
Explanation:
This program exercise #4 wants the user to write a program in python that contains a list of movies titles, years and movie rating. You will need to display a menu option that allows the user to list all of the movies, add a movie, delete a movie and exit out of the program. This will be done using lists and the functions to add an element to a list and how to delete an element to a list. The program should be written utilizing functions in python for the main function, the display_menu function, the delete function, the add function and the list movie function. You can place this all in one python file or include them in various python files that include them into the main program. Let me know if you have any questions with this exercise. Output Screen: COMMAND MENU list - List all movies add - Add a movie del - Delete a movie exit - Exit program Command List: list 1. Monty Python and the Holy Grail, 1979, R 2. On the Waterfront, 1954, PG 3. Cat on a Hot Tim Roof, 1958, R Command: add Name: Gone with the Wind Year: 1939 Rating: PG Gone with the Wind was added.
Answer:
The program in Python is as follows:
def display_menu(titles,years,ratings):
for i in range(len(titles)):
print(str(i+1)+". "+titles[i]+", "+str(years[i])+", "+str(ratings[i]))
def delete(titles,years,ratings):
del_item = input("Movie: ")
if del_item in titles:
print(del_item,"was deleted")
index = titles.index(del_item)
titles.pop(index)
years.pop(index)
ratings.pop(index)
return(titles,years,ratings)
def add(titles,years,ratings):
title = input("Title: ")
year = int(input("Year: "))
rating = int(input("Ratings: "))
print(title,"was added")
titles.append(title)
years.append(year)
ratings.append(rating)
return(titles,years,ratings)
titles = []
years = []
ratings = []
print("COMMAND MENU list\nlist - List movies\nadd - Add movie del\ndel - Delete movie exit\nexit - Exit program")
menu = (input("Command List: "))
while(menu.lower() == "list" or menu.lower() == "add" or menu.lower() == "del"):
if menu.lower() == "list":
display_menu(titles,years,ratings)
elif menu.lower() == "add":
titles, years, ratings = add(titles,years,ratings)
elif menu.lower() == "del":
titles, years, ratings = delete(titles,years,ratings)
menu = (input("Command List: "))
elif menu.lower() == "exit":
break
print("Exited!!!")
Explanation:
See attachment for complete program where comments are used to explain some lines of the program
What is the hamming distance between the following bits? Sent
bits: 101100111, Received bits: 100111001
Select one: 5. Or 3 or 6 or4
I think
the hamming distance between the following bits its 5
explain three main steps in mail merging (6 marks)
Answer:
Explanation:
The mail merging process generally requires the following steps:
Creating a Main Document and the Template.
Creating a Data Source.
Defining the Merge Fields in the main document.
Merging the Data with the main document.
Saving/Exporting.
-1
Draw a flowchart to input two
numbers in variables M and N and
print the multiplication table from 1*1
to M*N
Answer:A flowchart is a diagram that depicts the steps involved in solving a problem. The following flowchart shows how to output the multiplication table ( n * 1 to m * 1) of a number, n and m:
what is the best plugin for subscription sites?
Answer:
Explanation:
MemberPress. MemberPress is a popular & well-supported membership plugin. ...
Restrict Content Pro. ...
Paid Memberships Pro. ...
Paid Member Subscriptions. ...
MemberMouse. ...
iThemes Exchange Membership Add-on. ...
Magic Members. ...
s2Member.
who would benefit from using self-driving cars
Answer:
self independent
no need to depend on others
Answer:
Door dash employee's/Uber eat employees
would benefit from this
which shortcut can we use to make directional heading of a cuboid more obvious while in the lidar view
Answer:
cutting across
Explanation:
Which of the following best explains how an analog audio signal is typically represented by a computer?
a. An analog audio signal is measured at regular intervals. Each measurement is stored as a sample, which is represented at the lowest level as a sequence of bits.
b. An analog audio signal is measured as a sequence of operations that describe how the sound can be reproduced. The operations are represented at the lowest level as programming instructions.
c. An analog audio signal is measured as input parameters to a program or procedure. The inputs are represented at the lowest level as a collection of variables.
d. An analog audio signal is measured as text that describes the attributes of the sound. The text is represented at the lowest level as a string.
Answer:
A. An analog audio signal is measured at regular intervals. Each measurement is stored as a sample, which is represented at the lowest level as a sequence of bits.
Explanation:
I took the test
list the main industries in Sierra Leone
Answer:
The main industries in Sierra Leone are: Diamond mining
Petroleum refining
Small - scale manufacturing (beverage, textiles,footwear)
Explanation:
They also engage in commercial ship repair
17. What are the basic modes of operation of 8255?Write the features of mode 0 in 8255?
Answer:
There are two basic operational modes of 8255:
Bit Set/Reset mode (BSR mode).
Input/Output mode (I/O mode).
Features of 8255 Microprocessor:
Mode 0 : Simple Input/Output.
Mode 1 : Input/Output with handshake.
Mode 2 : Bi-directional I/O data transfer.
It has three 8-bit ports : Port A, Port B, and Port C, which are arranged in two groups of 12 pins.
The 8255 can operate in 3 I/O modes : (i) Mode 0, (ii) Mode 1, & (iii) Mode 2.
You want a cable that could be used as a bus segment for your office network. The cable should also be able to support up to 100 devices. Which cable should you use?
A.
RG-6
B.
RG-8
C.
RG-58U
D.
RG-59
Answer: C
Explanation:
is used for finding out about objects, properties and methods
Answer:
science
Explanation:
Write a MIPS assembly language program that prompts for a user to enter a series of floating point numbers and calls read_float to read in numbers and store them in an array only if the same number is not stored in the array yet. Then the program should display the array content on the console window.
Consult the green sheet and the chapter 3 for assembly instructions for floating point numbers. Here is one instruction that you might use:
c.eq.s $f2, $f4
bc1t Label1
Here if the value in the register $f2 is equals to the value in $f4, it jumps to the Label1. If it should jump when the value in the register $f2 is NOT equals to the value in $f4, then it should be:
c.eq.s $f2, $f4
bc1f Label1
To load a single precision floating point number (instead of lw for an integer), you might use:
l.s $f12, 0($t0)
To store a single precision floating point number (instead of sw for an integer), you might use:
s.s $f12, 0($t0)
To assign a constant floating point number (instead of li for an integer), you might use:
li.s $f12, 123.45
To copy a floating point number from one register to another (instead of move for an integer), you might use:
mov.s $f10, $f12
The following shows the syscall numbers needed for this assignment.
System Call System Call System Call
Number Operation Description
2 print_float $v0 = 2, $f12 = float number to be printed
4 print_string $v0 = 4, $a0 = address of beginning of ASCIIZ string
6 read_float $v0 = 6; user types a float number at keyboard; value is store in $f0
8 read_string $v0 = 8; user types string at keybd; addr of beginning of string is store in $a0; len in $a1
------------------------------------------
C program will ask a user to enter numbers and store them in an array
only if the same number is not in the array yet.
Then it prints out the result array content.
You need to write MIPS assembly code based on the following C code.
-------------------------------------------
void main( )
{
int arraysize = 10;
float array[arraysize];
int i, j, alreadyStored;
float num;
i = 0;
while (i < arraysize)
{
printf("Enter a number:\n");
//read an integer from a user input and store it in num1
scanf("%f", &num);
//check if the number is already stored in the array
alreadyStored = 0;
for (j = 0; j < i; j++)
{
if (array[j] == num)
{
alreadyStored = 1;
}
}
//Only if the same number is not in the array yet
if (alreadyStored == 0)
{
array[i] = num;
i++;
}
}
printf("The array contains the following:\n");
i = 0;
while (i < arraysize)
{
printf("%f\n", array[i]);
i++;
}
return;
}
Here are sample outputs (user input is in bold): -- note that you might get some rounding errors
Enter a number:
3
Enter a number:
54.4
Enter a number:
2
Enter a number:
5
Enter a number:
2
Enter a number:
-4
Enter a number:
5
Enter a number:
76
Enter a number:
-23
Enter a number:
43.53
Enter a number:
-43.53
Enter a number:
43.53
Enter a number:
65.43
The array contains the following:
3.00000000
54.40000153
2.00000000
5.00000000
-4.00000000
76.00000000
-23.00000000
43.52999878
-43.52999878
65.43000031
Explanation:
Here if the value in the register $f2 is equals to the value in $f4, it jumps to the Label1. If it should jump when the value in the register $f2 is NOT equals to the value in $f4, then it should be