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cricket20 [7]
3 years ago
11

You would like to know how many cells contain data. Which function should you use?

Computers and Technology
1 answer:
Helga [31]3 years ago
6 0
If we're talking about excel functions, A is your answer.

The COUNT function does exactly that (with modifications of it counting specific things e.g. COUNTA, COUNTIF, etc)

MIN returns the minimum value in the selected range.
SUM returns the sum of the values in the selected range.
ABS returns the absolute value of the selected cell.
You might be interested in
A=1/2h(a+b) solve for h
devlian [24]

A=1/2h(a+b)

1/2 can be said as 0.5

so

A=0.5h(a+b)

0.5h is being multiplied with (a+b), taking this expression of left hand side gives

A/0.5(a+b)=h

OR

h=A/0.5(a+b)

This is the final answer

8 0
3 years ago
How each programming language differs in terms of constructs, techniques, use and requirements?
Anuta_ua [19.1K]

Programming languages are (designed to be) easily used by machines, but not people.

Natural languages (like English) are easily used by humans, but not machines.

Programming languages are unambiguous, while natural languages are often multiply ambiguous and require interpretation in context to be fully understood (also why it’s so hard to get machines to understand them). Natural languages are also creative and allow poetry, metaphor and other interpretations. Programming does allow some variation in style, but the meaning is not flexible.

Lojban (Wikipedia) is an artificial language designed to try to bridge the gap between these two types of languages. It is specifically unambiguous yet something that a human can pronounce and even speak meaningfully. It can be considered a somewhat successful experiment yet limited in functionality in some ways in both domains (and not a real substitute for a normal programming language, but perhaps useful as an interface).

Natural languages consist of sentences, usually declarative sentences expressing information in a sequence. Programming languages typically are not declarative but procedural, giving instructions to the machine to do something (like commands in natural languages). Rarely, programming languages are declarative, such as Prolog, where statements are given to the computer, then the evaluation consists of finding possible solutions that match those statements (generate a list of words based on possible combinations of letters as defined just by letter-combining rules, for example).

The vocabulary of natural languages is filled with conceptual terms. The vocabulary of programming languages is generally only ‘grammatical’/functional ‘words’ like basic comments, plus various custom-named things like variables and functions. There are no words like you’d look up in a dictionary to express something like ‘love’ or ‘happy’ or ‘sing’.

The grammatical structures vary in more ways than are easy to list here. But some of the most obvious factors are that words don’t have separable parts in programming languages (like English cat-s to form a plural) [=no morphology], and that via brackets, line breaks or other markers, embedding tends to be overtly and clearly marked on both sides for the parser in programming languages, whereas spoken languages usually only have one word (like “that”) linking embedded sentences, and sometimes no word at all. This is another reason that parsing human languages is so hard on a computer.

You could also look at Hockett’s design features and see which apply to programming languages: What is the difference between human and animal language?

In a very general sense, programming languages aren’t used for bidirectional communication and may not properly be considered “languages” in the same sense as natural languages. Just looking at Hockett’s features, they’re completely distinct in being written only, do not involve interchangeability between the speaker and hearer, do not have ‘duality of patterning’ meaning multiple layers of structure as sounds vs. phrases (phonology vs. syntax), and are not transmitted culturally (well, maybe). It’s just very hard to even try to make the comparison.

Most fundamentally, it is worth asking if programming languages even have meaning, or if they are just instructions. This is similar to the Chinese room thought experiment— given a book of instructions for how to translate Chinese, but without actually understanding it, would a human (or computer) with that book be considered to “know” Chinese? Probably not. A computer doesn’t “know” anything, it just does what the instructions tell it to. Therefore, programming languages have no semantics/meaning. They just are instructions, which translate into electronic signals, nothing more.

6 0
2 years ago
Can someone please give me a good definition to audience expectations!<br> (in film)
denis-greek [22]

Audience expectations are things the audience expect/predict to see, hear, or feel while watching a film.

For example, if you go to a horror movie, you expect to be scared or feel anxious. If the movie doesn't make you feel that way, you will get it a negative review.

4 0
4 years ago
You have been hired by Beta Airlines to help them with their flight prices. You are to create a 10 x 10 2D array (also called a
AveGali [126]

Answer:

See explaination

Explanation:

//Array to store prices

INT PRICE[10][10]

//Loop through 2d array

FOR I FROM 0 TO 10

FOR J FROM 0 TO 10

//Populate a random int

PRICE[I][J] = RANDOM_INT(99,1999)

PRINT(PRICE[I][J]+" ")

PRINT()

//Prompt user for desired price

COST = READ_INPUT('Please enter your desired flight price: ')

//Variable to store if a match is found

MATCH = FALSE

//Loop through all ints in price

FOR I FROM 0 TO 10

FOR J FROM 0 TO 10

//Compare price with Cost

IF PRICE[I][J]==COST

MATCH = TRUE

BREAK

//Check if match is true

IF MATCH = TRUE

PRINT('A flight was found for that price, have a safe trip!')

ELSE

PRINT('No flight was found for that price, please try a new price.')

4 0
4 years ago
Bytes are typically represented with a lowercase b and bits with an uppercase B.<br> true or false
34kurt

Answer:

False

Explanation:

Byte(B) is uppercase

bit(b) is lowercase

Good way to remember is that its takes 8 bits makes a byte. In other word, a byte is bigger than a bit so it makes sense that byte is uppercase.

7 0
3 years ago
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