Digital arts (inkscape)
1. when should you use the undo command?
2. when you close a fi...
Computers and Technology, 22.08.2019 14:30 friskisthebest1
Digital arts (inkscape)
1. when should you use the undo command?
2. when you close a file, what happens to the undo history list for that file?
3. what is freehand drawing?
4. what are three changes you can make to an object using the select tool?
Answers: 1
Computers and Technology, 21.06.2019 17:30
How are natural numbers, whole numbers, integers, and rational numbers related
Answers: 3
Computers and Technology, 23.06.2019 05:30
Sally is editing her science report about living things. she needs to copy a paragraph from her original report. order the steps sally needs to do to copy the text to her new document.
Answers: 1
Computers and Technology, 23.06.2019 17:30
When making changes to optimize part of a processor, it is often the case that speeding up one type of instruction comes at the cost of slowing down something else. for example, if we put in a complicated fast floating-point unit, that takes space, and something might have to be moved farther away from the middle to accommodate it, adding an extra cycle in delay to reach that unit. the basic amdahl's law equation does not take into account this trade-off. a. if the new fast floating-point unit speeds up floating-point operations by, on average, 2ă—, and floating-point operations take 20% of the original program's execution time, what is the overall speedup (ignoring the penalty to any other instructions)? b. now assume that speeding up the floating-point unit slowed down data cache accesses, resulting in a 1.5ă— slowdown (or 2/3 speedup). data cache accesses consume 10% of the execution time. what is the overall speedup now? c. after implementing the new floating-point operations, what percentage of execution time is spent on floating-point operations? what percentage is spent on data cache accesses?
Answers: 2
Computers and Technology, 24.06.2019 02:00
Write an expression that will cause the following code to print "equal" if the value of sensorreading is "close enough" to targetvalue. otherwise, print "not equal". ex: if targetvalue is 0.3333 and sensorreading is (1.0/3.0), output is:
Answers: 1
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