
Starting Out with C++ from Control Structures to Objects Plus MyLab Programming with Pearson eText -- Access Card Package (9th Edition)
9th Edition
ISBN: 9780134544847
Author: Tony Gaddis
Publisher: PEARSON
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Question
Chapter 10, Problem 5PC
Program Plan Intro
Sentence Capitalizer
Program plan:
- Include the required header files to the program.
- Define function prototype which is used in the program.
- Define the “main()” function.
- Declare the required variables.
- Get the input c-string from the user and call the function “capital”.
- Print the c-string result.
- Get the input string object from the user and call the function “capital”.
- Print the string object result.
- Define the “capital” function.
- Declare the variable.
- The “while” loop is used to capitalize the first letters.
- The “while” loop condition is used to ignore the whitespace.
- The “if” condition is used to capitalize the first letters.
- The “while” loop is used to ignore the non-null and non-period character.
- The “if” condition is used to move to the next string.
- Define the “capital” function.
- The “if” condition change the first letter into uppercase letter.
- The “for” loop is used to capitalize the first letters.
- The “if” condition is used to ignore the whitespaces and capitalize the first letters.
- Finally return the result to the main function.
Expert Solution & Answer

Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solution
Students have asked these similar questions
Create 6 users: Don, Liz, Shamir, Jose, Kate, and Sal.
Create 2 groups: marketing and research.
Add Shamir, Jose, and Kate to the marketing group.
Add Don, Liz, and Sal to the research group.
Create a shared directory for each group.
Create two files to put into each directory:
spreadsheetJanuary.txt
meetingNotes.txt
Assign access permissions to the directories:
Groups should have Read+Write access
Leave owner permissions as they are
“Everyone else” should not have any access
Submit for grade:
Screenshot of /etc/passwd contents showing your new users
Screenshot of /etc/group contents showing new groups with their members
Screenshot of shared directories you created with files and permissions
⚫ your circuit diagrams for your basic bricks, such as AND, OR, XOR gates and 1 bit multiplexers,
⚫ your circuit diagrams for your extended full adder, designed in Section 1 and
⚫ your circuit diagrams for your 8-bit arithmetical-logical unit, designed in Section 2.
1 An Extended Full Adder
In this Section, we are going to design an extended full adder circuit (EFA). That EFA takes 6 one bit inputs: aj, bj,
Cin, Tin, t₁ and to. Depending on the four possible combinations of values on t₁ and to, the EFA produces 3 one bit
outputs: sj, Cout and rout.
The EFA can be specified in principle by a truth table with 26 = 64 entries and 3 outputs. However, as the EFA
ignores certain inputs in certain cases, it is easier to work with the following overview specification, depending only
on t₁ and to in the first place:
t₁ to Description
00
Output Relationship
Ignored
Inputs
Addition Mode
2 Coutsjaj + bj + Cin, Tout= 0
Tin
0 1
Shift Left Mode
Sj = Cin,
Cout=bj, rout = 0
rin, aj
10
1 1
Shift Right…
Show the correct stereochemistry
when needed!!
mechanism:
mechanism:
Show the correct stereochemistry when needed!!
Br
NaOPh
diethyl ether
substitution
Chapter 10 Solutions
Starting Out with C++ from Control Structures to Objects Plus MyLab Programming with Pearson eText -- Access Card Package (9th Edition)
Ch. 10.2 - Write a short description of each of the following...Ch. 10.2 - Prob. 10.2CPCh. 10.2 - Write an if statement that will display the word...Ch. 10.2 - What is the output of the following statement?...Ch. 10.2 - Write a loop that asks the user Do you want to...Ch. 10.4 - Write a short description of each of the following...Ch. 10.4 - Prob. 10.7CPCh. 10.4 - Prob. 10.8CPCh. 10.4 - Prob. 10.9CPCh. 10.4 - When complete, the following program skeleton will...
Ch. 10.5 - Write a short description of each of the following...Ch. 10.5 - Write a statement that will convert the string 10...Ch. 10.5 - Prob. 10.13CPCh. 10.5 - Write a statement that will convert the string...Ch. 10.5 - Write a statement that will convert the integer...Ch. 10.6 - Prob. 10.16CPCh. 10 - Prob. 1RQECh. 10 - Prob. 2RQECh. 10 - Prob. 3RQECh. 10 - Prob. 4RQECh. 10 - Prob. 5RQECh. 10 - Prob. 6RQECh. 10 - Prob. 7RQECh. 10 - Prob. 8RQECh. 10 - Prob. 9RQECh. 10 - Prob. 10RQECh. 10 - The __________ function returns true if the...Ch. 10 - Prob. 12RQECh. 10 - Prob. 13RQECh. 10 - The __________ function returns the lowercase...Ch. 10 - The _________ file must be included in a program...Ch. 10 - Prob. 16RQECh. 10 - Prob. 17RQECh. 10 - Prob. 18RQECh. 10 - Prob. 19RQECh. 10 - Prob. 20RQECh. 10 - Prob. 21RQECh. 10 - Prob. 22RQECh. 10 - Prob. 23RQECh. 10 - Prob. 24RQECh. 10 - The ________ function returns the value of a...Ch. 10 - Prob. 26RQECh. 10 - The following if statement determines whether...Ch. 10 - Assume input is a char array holding a C-string....Ch. 10 - Look at the following array definition: char...Ch. 10 - Prob. 30RQECh. 10 - Write a function that accepts a pointer to a...Ch. 10 - Prob. 32RQECh. 10 - Prob. 33RQECh. 10 - T F If touppers argument is already uppercase, it...Ch. 10 - T F If tolowers argument is already lowercase, it...Ch. 10 - T F The strlen function returns the size of the...Ch. 10 - Prob. 37RQECh. 10 - T F C-string-handling functions accept as...Ch. 10 - T F The strcat function checks to make sure the...Ch. 10 - Prob. 40RQECh. 10 - T F The strcpy function performs no bounds...Ch. 10 - T F There is no difference between 847 and 847.Ch. 10 - Prob. 43RQECh. 10 - char numeric[5]; int x = 123; numeri c = atoi(x);Ch. 10 - char string1[] = "Billy"; char string2[] = " Bob...Ch. 10 - Prob. 46RQECh. 10 - Prob. 1PCCh. 10 - Prob. 2PCCh. 10 - Prob. 3PCCh. 10 - Average Number of Letters Modify the program you...Ch. 10 - Prob. 5PCCh. 10 - Prob. 6PCCh. 10 - Name Arranger Write a program that asks for the...Ch. 10 - Prob. 8PCCh. 10 - Prob. 9PCCh. 10 - Prob. 10PCCh. 10 - Prob. 11PCCh. 10 - Password Verifier Imagine you are developing a...Ch. 10 - Prob. 13PCCh. 10 - Word Separator Write a program that accepts as...Ch. 10 - Character Analysis If you have downloaded this...Ch. 10 - Prob. 16PCCh. 10 - Prob. 17PCCh. 10 - Prob. 18PCCh. 10 - Check Writer Write a program that displays a...
Knowledge Booster
Similar questions
- In javaarrow_forwardKeanPerson #keanld:int #keanEmail:String #firstName:String #lastName: String KeanAlumni -yearOfGraduation: int - employmentStatus: String + KeanPerson() + KeanPerson(keanld: int, keanEmail: String, firstName: String, lastName: String) + getKeanld(): int + getKeanEmail(): String +getFirstName(): String + getLastName(): String + setFirstName(firstName: String): void + setLastName(lastName: String): void +toString(): String +getParkingRate(): double + KeanAlumni() + KeanAlumni(keanld: int, keanEmail: String, firstName: String, lastName: String, yearOfGraduation: int, employmentStatus: String) +getYearOfGraduation(): int + setYearOfGraduation(yearOfGraduation: int): void +toString(): String +getParkingRate(): double In this question, write Java code to Create and Test the superclass: Abstract KeanPerson and a subclass of the KeanPerson: KeanAlumni. Task 1: Implement Abstract Class KeanPerson using UML (10 points) • Four data fields • Two constructors (1 default and 1 constructor with all…arrow_forwardPlz correct answer by best experts...??arrow_forward
- Q3) using the following image matrix a- b- 12345 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 1617181920 21 22 23 24 25 Using direct chaotic one dimension method to convert the plain text to stego text (hello ahmed)? Using direct chaotic two-dimension method to convert the plain text to stego text?arrow_forward: The Multithreaded Cook In this lab, we'll practice multithreading. Using Semaphores for synchronization, implement a multithreaded cook that performs the following recipe, with each task being contained in a single Thread: 1. Task 1: Cut onions. a. Waits for none. b. Signals Task 4 2. Task 2: Mince meat. a. Waits for none b. Signals Task 4 3. Task 3: Slice aubergines. a. Waits for none b. Signals Task 6 4. Task 4: Make sauce. a. Waits for Task 1, and 2 b. Signals Task 6 5. Task 5: Finished Bechamel. a. Waits for none b. Signals Task 7 6. Task 6: Layout the layers. a. Waits for Task 3, and 4 b. Signals Task 7 7. Task 7: Put Bechamel and Cheese. a. Waits for Task 5, and 6 b. Signals Task 9 8. Task 8: Turn on oven. a. Waits for none b. Signals Task 9 9. Task 9: Cook. a. Waits for Task 7, and 8 b. Signals none At the start of each task (once all Semaphores have been acquired), print out a string of the task you are starting, sleep for 2-11 seconds, then print out a string saying that you…arrow_forwardProgramming Problems 9.28 Assume that a system has a 32-bit virtual address with a 4-KB page size. Write a C program that is passed a virtual address (in decimal) on the command line and have it output the page number and offset for the given address. As an example, your program would run as follows: ./addresses 19986 Your program would output: The address 19986 contains: page number = 4 offset = 3602 Writing this program will require using the appropriate data type to store 32 bits. We encourage you to use unsigned data types as well. Programming Projects Contiguous Memory Allocation In Section 9.2, we presented different algorithms for contiguous memory allo- cation. This project will involve managing a contiguous region of memory of size MAX where addresses may range from 0 ... MAX - 1. Your program must respond to four different requests: 1. Request for a contiguous block of memory 2. Release of a contiguous block of memory 3. Compact unused holes of memory into one single block 4.…arrow_forward
- using r languagearrow_forwardProgramming Problems 9.28 Assume that a system has a 32-bit virtual address with a 4-KB page size. Write a C program that is passed a virtual address (in decimal) on the command line and have it output the page number and offset for the given address. As an example, your program would run as follows: ./addresses 19986 Your program would output: The address 19986 contains: page number = 4 offset = 3602 Writing this program will require using the appropriate data type to store 32 bits. We encourage you to use unsigned data types as well. Programming Projects Contiguous Memory Allocation In Section 9.2, we presented different algorithms for contiguous memory allo- cation. This project will involve managing a contiguous region of memory of size MAX where addresses may range from 0 ... MAX - 1. Your program must respond to four different requests: 1. Request for a contiguous block of memory 2. Release of a contiguous block of memory 3. Compact unused holes of memory into one single block 4.…arrow_forwardusing r languagearrow_forward
- Write a function to compute a Monte Carlo estimate of the Beta(3, 3) cdf, and use the function to estimate F(x) for x = 0.1,0.2,...,0.9. Compare the estimates with the values returned by the pbeta function in R.arrow_forwardWrite a function to compute a Monte Carlo estimate of the Gamma(r = 3, λ = 2) cdf, and use the function to estimate F(x) for x = 0.2, 0.4, . . . , 2.0. Compare the estimates with the values returned by the pgamma function in R.arrow_forwardusing r languagearrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- EBK JAVA PROGRAMMINGComputer ScienceISBN:9781337671385Author:FARRELLPublisher:CENGAGE LEARNING - CONSIGNMENTC++ Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program...Computer ScienceISBN:9781337102087Author:D. S. MalikPublisher:Cengage LearningC++ for Engineers and ScientistsComputer ScienceISBN:9781133187844Author:Bronson, Gary J.Publisher:Course Technology Ptr
- Programming Logic & Design ComprehensiveComputer ScienceISBN:9781337669405Author:FARRELLPublisher:CengageMicrosoft Visual C#Computer ScienceISBN:9781337102100Author:Joyce, Farrell.Publisher:Cengage Learning,Programming with Microsoft Visual Basic 2017Computer ScienceISBN:9781337102124Author:Diane ZakPublisher:Cengage Learning

EBK JAVA PROGRAMMING
Computer Science
ISBN:9781337671385
Author:FARRELL
Publisher:CENGAGE LEARNING - CONSIGNMENT

C++ Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program...
Computer Science
ISBN:9781337102087
Author:D. S. Malik
Publisher:Cengage Learning

C++ for Engineers and Scientists
Computer Science
ISBN:9781133187844
Author:Bronson, Gary J.
Publisher:Course Technology Ptr
Programming Logic & Design Comprehensive
Computer Science
ISBN:9781337669405
Author:FARRELL
Publisher:Cengage

Microsoft Visual C#
Computer Science
ISBN:9781337102100
Author:Joyce, Farrell.
Publisher:Cengage Learning,

Programming with Microsoft Visual Basic 2017
Computer Science
ISBN:9781337102124
Author:Diane Zak
Publisher:Cengage Learning