CS205 Project One

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School

Southern New Hampshire University *

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Course

205

Subject

Computer Science

Date

Dec 6, 2023

Type

docx

Pages

3

Uploaded by CaptainSteelSeaUrchin27

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Project One: Pseudocode Steps Angie Freeland Southern New Hampshire University CS 205: Foundations in Software Development Dr. Maciosek November 26, 2023
Project One: Pseudocode Steps 1. Start the game. 2. The program will initialize variables for userTotal, compTotal, tieTotal, and i, setting them all to zero. - userTotal will hold the number of wins for the user. - compTotal will hold the number of wins for the computer. - tieTotal will hold the number of ties between the user and the computer. - i will hold the number of iterations completed by the loop. 3. Establish a for loop to repeat the loop body steps ten times before breaking and proceeding to the next steps. 4. Within the loop body, prompt the user to input a choice of 1, 2, or 3, representing the user's symbol in the game. 1 represents rock, 2 represents paper, and 3 represents scissors. 5. Prompt the computer to enter a random number between 1 and 3, representing the computer's symbol in the game. 1 represents rock, 2 represents paper, and 3 represents scissors. 6. Compare the user input and the computer input. If they are equal, increment tieTotal by 1, display "The End...Tie Wins!" to output, increment i by 1, and proceed to the next loop iteration. If they are not equal, proceed to the next step. 7. Compare the user input and the computer input. If the user input is 1 and the computer input is 3, increment userTotal by 1, display "The End...You Win!" to output, increment i by 1, and proceed to the next loop iteration. If they are not equal, proceed to the next step.
8. Compare the user input and the computer input. If the user input is 3 and the computer input is 2, increment userTotal by 1, display "The End...You Win!" to output, increment i by 1, and proceed to the next loop iteration. If they are not equal, proceed to the next step. 9. If none of the previous conditions are met, increment compTotal by 1, display "The End...Computer Wins!" to output, increment i by 1, and proceed to the next loop iteration. 10. Repeat steps 4-9 a total of 10 times. 11. After the loop has iterated 10 times, break the loop and display the values of userTotal, compTotal, and tieTotal to output. These values represent the number of games won by the user, the computer, and the number of tie games. 12. The game ends.
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