Java How To Program (Early Objects) (10th Edition)
10th Edition
ISBN: 9780133807806
Author: Paul J. Deitel, Harvey Deitel
Publisher: PEARSON
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Textbook Question
Chapter 4, Problem 10.1E
- 1. Read the problem statement.
- 2. Formulate the
algorithm using pseudocode and top-down, stepwise refinement. - 3. Write a Java
program. - 4. Test, debug and execute the Java program.
- 5. Process three complete sets of data.
(Sale Commission Calculator) A large company pays its salespeople on a commission basis. The salespeople receive $200 per week plus 9% of their gross sales for that week. For example, a salesperson who sells $5,000 worth of merchandise in a week receives $200 plus 9% of $5,000, or a total of $650. You’ve been supplied with a list of the items sold by each salesperson. The values of these items are shown in Fig. 4.33. Develop a Java application that inputs one salesperson’s items sold for last week and calculates and displays that salesperson’s earnings. There’s no limit to the number of items that can be sold.
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Question-1
Friend's Party Circle:
There are a few friends living in the same area.
They have a party every weekend and the place
of party change each week. It is always a
difficult task to select a place which is nearest
for everyone. They all decided
advantage of Computer Science to solve this
problem.
to take
Names of friends are Ahmed, Rehman, Careem,
Basit, Dawood, Ghani, and Farid. Ahmed lives
at 5 minutes’walk from rehman and at 10
minutes' walk from Careem. Careem lives at 3
minutes' walk from Dawood. Rehman lives at 4
minutes' walk from Basit and 2 minutes' walk
from Dawood. Dawood lives at two minutes'
walk from Farid. Ghani lives at 2 minutes' walk
from Basit.
b. In above directed graph G. You are
required to devise an algorithm to find
all possible paths.
Question 4 - Algorithm Design
Imagine you are a treasure hunter standing at one side of the river. There are n (a positive
integer) stones on the river. They are aligned on a straight line and at the nth stone, there is
treasure waiting for you. Your target is to reach the nth stone. For each move, you have the
choice of either walking (move one stone ahead) or leaping (move two stones ahead). Also, you
are not allowed to travel backwards. Design an algorithm that calculates the number of ways
(sequences of walks/leaps) that get you to the treasure stone. You should clearly explain the
algorithm and demonstrate the correctness of the algorithm with a complete proof.
Here is an example. For n =
1
5, there are 8 ways:
Method 1: walk → walk → walk → walk → walk
Method 2: walk → walk → walk → leap
Method 3: walk → walk → leap → walk
Method 4: walk → leap → walk →
walk
walk
Method 5: leap → walk → walk →
Method 6: leap → leap walk
Method 7: leap → walk → leap
Method 8: walk → leap leap
Chapter 4 Solutions
Java How To Program (Early Objects) (10th Edition)
Ch. 4 - Fill in the blanks in each of the following...Ch. 4 - Fill in the blanks in each of the following...Ch. 4 - Fill in the blanks in each of the following...Ch. 4 - Fill in the blanks in each of the following...Ch. 4 - Prob. 1.5SRECh. 4 - Fill in the blanks in each of the following...Ch. 4 - Prob. 1.7SRECh. 4 - Fill in the blanks in each of the following...Ch. 4 - State whether each of the following is true or...Ch. 4 - State whether each of the following is true or...
Ch. 4 - State whether each of the following is true or...Ch. 4 - State whether each of the following is true or...Ch. 4 - State whether each of the following is true or...Ch. 4 - Prob. 2.6SRECh. 4 - State whether each of the following is true or...Ch. 4 - Prob. 2.8SRECh. 4 - State whether each of the following is true or...Ch. 4 - State whether each of the following is true or...Ch. 4 - Write four different Java statements that each add...Ch. 4 - Write Java statements to accomplish each of the...Ch. 4 - Write Java statements to accomplish each of the...Ch. 4 - Write Java statements to accomplish each of the...Ch. 4 - Write Java statements to accomplish each of the...Ch. 4 - Write a Java statement to accomplish each of the...Ch. 4 - Write a Java statement to accomplish each of the...Ch. 4 - Write a Java statement to accomplish each of the...Ch. 4 - Write a Java statement to accomplish each of the...Ch. 4 - Combine the statements that you wrote in Exercise...Ch. 4 - Determine the value of the variables in the...Ch. 4 - Identify and correct the errors in each of the...Ch. 4 - What is wrong with the following while statement?...Ch. 4 - Compare and contrast the if single-selection...Ch. 4 - Explain what happens when a Java program attempts...Ch. 4 - Describe the two ways in which control statements...Ch. 4 - What type of iteration would be appropriate for...Ch. 4 - What is the difference between preincrementing and...Ch. 4 - Prob. 6.1ECh. 4 - What does the following program print? 1. //...Ch. 4 - 1. Read the problem statement. 2. Formulate the...Ch. 4 - 1. Read the problem statement. 2. Formulate the...Ch. 4 - 1. Read the problem statement. 2. Formulate the...Ch. 4 - 1. Read the problem statement. 2. Formulate the...Ch. 4 - (Find the Largest Number) The process of finding...Ch. 4 - Prob. 13.1ECh. 4 - (Find the Two Largest Numbers) Using an approach...Ch. 4 - Prob. 15.1ECh. 4 - What does the following program print? 1. //...Ch. 4 - What does the following program print? 1. //...Ch. 4 - (Dangling-else Problem) The Java compiler always...Ch. 4 - (Another Dangling-else Problem) Based on the...Ch. 4 - (Another Dangling-else Problem) Based on the...Ch. 4 - Prob. 21.1ECh. 4 - (Palindromes) A palindrome is a sequence of...Ch. 4 - (Printing the Decimal Equivalent of a Binary...Ch. 4 - (Checkerboard Pattern of Asterisks) Write an...Ch. 4 - (Multiples of 2 with an Infinite Loop) Write an...Ch. 4 - (Whats Wrong with This Code?) What is wrong with...Ch. 4 - Prob. 27.1ECh. 4 - Prob. 28.1ECh. 4 - Write an application that estimates the value of...Ch. 4 - Write an application that computes the value of e...Ch. 4 - (Enforcing Privacy with Cryptography) The...Ch. 4 - (World Population Growth) World population has...
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