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In Exercises 41 through 46, identify the errors.
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- Algorithm Steps Fig 2: (I have provided an algorithm and fewer code hints) 1. Set coordinates for NORTH, SOUTH, WEST, and EAST each 100pixels away from center (0,0) 2. Set outer circle size = 40 and inner circle size = 20 3. Set window size 600x600 4. Draw y-axis by connecting NORTH and SOUTH 5. Draw x-axis by connecting WEST and EAST 6. Display name of coordinates 7. Position point to draw circle 8. Set angle 90 degree 9. Set color to red 10. Draw outer circle 11. Draw inner circle and fill redarrow_forwardIntroduction Some number of teams are participating in a race. You are not told how many teams are participating but you do know that: Each team has a name, which is one of the uppercase letters A-Z. No two teams have the same name, so there are a maximum number of 26 teams. Each team has the same number of members. No two runners cross the finish line at the same time – i.e. there are no ties. At the end of the race we can write the results as a string of characters indicating the order in which runners crossed the finish line. For example: ZZAZAA We can see there were two teams: A and Z. Team A’s runners finished in 3rd, 5th and 6th place. Team Z’s runners finished in 1st, 2nd and 4th place. Scoring the race Each runner is assigned a score equal to their finishing place. In the example above team Z’s runners achieved scores of 1, 2 and 4. Team A’s runners scores were 3, 5, and 6 respectively. The team’s score is the sum of the members score divided by the number of people on…arrow_forwardConvert Months Write a program that allows the user to enter a whole number of monthsand then converts that amount of time to years and months. See Fig. 3.38. The programshould use both integer division and the Mod operator.arrow_forward
- Problem Description: Standard telephone keypads contain the digits zero through nine. The numbers two through nine each have three letters associated with them (Fig. 1). Many people find it difficult to memorize phone numbers, so they use the correspondence between digits and letters to develop seven-letter words that correspond to their phone numbers. For example, a person whose telephone number is 686-2377 might use the correspondence indicated in Fig. 1 to develop the seven-letter word “NUMBERS.” Every seven-letter word corresponds to exactly one seven-digit telephone number. A restaurant wishing to increase its takeout business could surely do so with the number 825-3688 (i.e., “TAKEOUT”). Fig. 1: Telephone keypad digits and letters. Every seven-letter phone number corresponds to many different seven-letter words, but most of these words represent unrecognizable juxtapositions of letters. It’s possible, however, that the owner of a barbershop would be pleased to know that the…arrow_forwardCelebrity problem A celebrity among a group of n people is a person who knows nobody but is known by everybody else. The task is to identify a celebrity by only asking questions to people of the form: ”Do you know him/her?” Solution Select two people from the group given, say, A and B, and ask A whether A knows B. If A knows B, remove A from the remaining people who can be a celebrity; if A doesn’t know B, remove B from this group. Solve the problem recursively for the remaining group of people who can be a celebrity Which design strategy does the following solution use? A-)Decrease-by-a-constant factor algorithm B-)Variable-size-decrease algorithm C-)Decrease-by-a-constant algorithm D-)Divide-and-Conquerarrow_forwardLocate a Letter Write a program that requests a letter, converts it to uppercase, and gives its first position in the sentence “THE QUICK BROWN FOX JUMPS OVER A LAZY DOG.” See Fig. 3.31.arrow_forward
- Write a program that requests a three-part name and then displays the middle name. See Fig. 2.33. Fig. 2.33 Enter a 3-part name: Michael Andrew Fox Middle name: Andrewarrow_forwardProgram 4 - CCC '07 J1 In the story Goldilocks and the Three Bears, each bear had a bowl of porridge to eat while sitting at his/her favourite chair. What the story didn't tell us is that Goldilocks moved the bowls around on the table, so the bowls were not at the right seats anymore. The bowls can be sorted by weight with the lightest bowl being the Baby Bear's bowl, the medium bowl being the Mama Bear's bowl and the heaviest bowl being the Papa Bear's bowl. Write a program that reads in three weights and prints out the weight of Mama Bear's bowl. You may assume all weights are positive integers less than 100. Sample Input 10 8arrow_forwardAge Write a program that requests your date of birth as input and tells your age. Hint:Use the DateDiff function with the DateInterval.Year option, and then use an If block tomodify the result. See Fig. 4.23 and the note in Exercise 40.arrow_forward
- Task 3: High cholesteral and high triglycerides have been assicuated with cardiovascular disease. During yearly medical visits a doctor might recommend certain actions if certain test results are received (see Table 1). Write a program that allows the user to enter the numeric cholesteral and triglyceride results and the gives the doctor a recommendation. Please show step-by-step on LabVIEW. Table 1 Recomendation Triglyceride (mg/fL) Total cholesteralSuggest a full workup >886 >240 mg/dLSuggest change in diet 500 to 886 200 to 239Suggest change in activity 150 to 499 N/AAll good <150 <200 Task 4: Create a new version of your file for Task 4. Add two boolean indicators (Round LED). Oneshould light up when both Triglyceride AND Cholesteral levels are in the “All good” range. Theother should light up when either Triglyceride OR Cholesteral levels are in the “Suggest a fullworkup” range. Please show step-by-step on LabVIEW.arrow_forwardSort Three Numbers Write a program that requests three different numbers as input and then displays the numbers in order. Use a Procedure named Sort to which the three values are passed ByRef and use a “Swap” procedure similar to the one in Example 3. See Fig. 5.36.arrow_forwardIn exercises 15 and 16, state and prove a loop invariant for the given pseudocode.arrow_forward
- C++ for Engineers and ScientistsComputer ScienceISBN:9781133187844Author:Bronson, Gary J.Publisher:Course Technology PtrC++ Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program...Computer ScienceISBN:9781337102087Author:D. S. MalikPublisher:Cengage Learning