Big Java Late Objects
Big Java Late Objects
2nd Edition
ISBN: 9781119330455
Author: Horstmann
Publisher: WILEY
Question
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Chapter 14, Problem 6PE
Program Plan Intro

Modified Selection sort for coins

Program plan:

Main.java

  • Create a class named “Main”. Inside the class,
    • Define the “main ()” method.
      • Declare the array.
      • Initialize the class object
        • Call the method “sort()”
      • Print the resultant value and the expected result.

SelectionSorter.java

  • Create a class named “SelectionSorter”. Inside the class,
    • Declare the required variables
    • Declare the array.
    • Declare the constructor and initialize the required variables.
    • Define the method “minimumPosition”
      • Assign the value to the array.
      • Loop that iterates for the values of the array.
      • Condition to compare the values
      • Return the minimum position.
    • Define the method “sort()”
      • Loop that iterates for the length of the array.
      • Finds the maximum position and perform the swap accordingly.
    • Define the method “swap()”
      • Assign the temp value
      • Assign the second value to the first value.
      • Assign the value of temp to the next value.

Coin.java

  • Create a class named “Coin”. Inside the class,
    • Declare the required variables
    • Declare the array.
    • Declare the constructor and initialize the required variables.
    • Define the method “getValue()”
      • Return the coin value
    • Define the method “getName()”
      • Return the Name value of the coin
    • Define the method “toString()”
      • Return the value of the coin and its corresponding name.
    • Define the method “compareTo()”.
      • Use necessary condition validation and return the results.

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can u solve this question
1. Unsigned Integers If we have an n-digit unsigned numeral dn-1d n-2...do in radix (or base) r, then the value of that numeral is n−1 r² di Σi=0 which is basically saying that instead of a 10's or 100's place we have an r's or r²'s place. For binary, decimal, and hex r equals 2, 10, and 16, respectively. Just a reminder that in order to write down a large number, we typically use the IEC or SI prefixing system: IEC: Ki = 210, Mi = 220, Gi = 230, Ti = 240, Pi = 250, Ei = 260, Zi = 270, Yi = 280; SI: K=103, M = 106, G = 109, T = 10¹², P = 1015, E = 10¹8, Z = 1021, Y = 1024. 1.1 Conversions a. (15 pts) Write the following using IEC prefixes: 213, 223, 251, 272, 226, 244 21323 Ki8 Ki 223 23 Mi 8 Mi b. (15 pts) Write the following using SI prefixes: 107, 10¹7, 10¹¹, 1022, 1026, 1015 107 10¹ M = 10 M = 1017102 P = 100 P c. (10 pts) Write the following with powers of 10: 7 K, 100 E, 21 G 7 K = 7*10³
answer shoul avoid using AI and should be basic and please explain

Chapter 14 Solutions

Big Java Late Objects

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