1answer.
Ask question
Login Signup
Ask question
All categories
  • English
  • Mathematics
  • Social Studies
  • Business
  • History
  • Health
  • Geography
  • Biology
  • Physics
  • Chemistry
  • Computers and Technology
  • Arts
  • World Languages
  • Spanish
  • French
  • German
  • Advanced Placement (AP)
  • SAT
  • Medicine
  • Law
  • Engineering
Ira Lisetskai [31]
3 years ago
14

I need some help with this!

Computers and Technology
1 answer:
aivan3 [116]3 years ago
8 0

Answer:1. Code Blocks

2. Pop.

3. Role-playing Games.

4. Storytelling

5. The sprite would draw a line to a random position, then create another line 100 units long.

6. Objective.

7. True

8. Obstacles.

9. Jumping over Bowser in a Mario game  motion-capture devices (e.g., Kinect, WiiMote)

10.  A balance of good and bad emotions.

11. Rescuing Princess Peach from Bowser  playing an ocarina to teleport across the land.

12. Designer

13. Count-controlled loop

14. True

15. Conditional Block.

16. The Landlord's Game.

17. Algorithm

18. Run/test window

19. Poker-type games.

20. Illustrations

21. Stop pen

22. Control

23. False

24. Role-playing game.

25. True.

26. Change y by -15

27. Scratch

28. The Olympics.

Explanation:

You might be interested in
Compare and contrast Charles bebbage and Blaise Pascal inventions<br>​
telo118 [61]

Explanation:

A computer might be described with deceptive simplicity as “an apparatus that performs routine calculations automatically.” Such a definition would owe its deceptiveness to a naive and narrow view of calculation as a strictly mathematical process. In fact, calculation underlies many activities that are not normally thought of as mathematical. Walking across a room, for instance, requires many complex, albeit subconscious, calculations. Computers, too, have proved capable of solving a vast array of problems, from balancing a checkbook to even—in the form of guidance systems for robots—walking across a room.

Before the true power of computing could be realized, therefore, the naive view of calculation had to be overcome. The inventors who laboured to bring the computer into the world had to learn that the thing they were inventing was not just a number cruncher, not merely a calculator. For example, they had to learn that it was not necessary to invent a new computer for every new calculation and that a computer could be designed to solve numerous problems, even problems not yet imagined when the computer was built. They also had to learn how to tell such a general problem-solving computer what problem to solve. In other words, they had to invent programming.

They had to solve all the heady problems of developing such a device, of implementing the design, of actually building the thing. The history of the solving of these problems is the history of the computer. That history is covered in this section, and links are provided to entries on many of the individuals and companies mentioned. In addition, see the articles computer science and supercomputer.

Early history

Computer precursors

The abacus

The earliest known calculating device is probably the abacus. It dates back at least to 1100 BCE and is still in use today, particularly in Asia. Now, as then, it typically consists of a rectangular frame with thin parallel rods strung with beads. Long before any systematic positional notation was adopted for the writing of numbers, the abacus assigned different units, or weights, to each rod. This scheme allowed a wide range of numbers to be represented by just a few beads and, together with the invention of zero in India, may have inspired the invention of the Hindu-Arabic number system. In any case, abacus beads can be readily manipulated to perform the common arithmetical operations—addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division—that are useful for commercial transactions and in bookkeeping.

The abacus is a digital device; that is, it represents values discretely. A bead is either in one predefined position or another, representing unambiguously, say, one or zero.

Analog calculators: from Napier’s logarithms to the slide rule

Calculating devices took a different turn when John Napier, a Scottish mathematician, published his discovery of logarithms in 1614. As any person can attest, adding two 10-digit numbers is much simpler than multiplying them together, and the transformation of a multiplication problem into an addition problem is exactly what logarithms enable. This simplification is possible because of the following logarithmic property: the logarithm of the product of two numbers is equal to the sum of the logarithms of the numbers. By 1624, tables with 14 significant digits were available for the logarithms of numbers from 1 to 20,000, and scientists quickly adopted the new labour-saving tool for tedious astronomical calculations.

Most significant for the development of computing, the transformation of multiplication into addition greatly simplified the possibility of mechanization. Analog calculating devices based on Napier’s logarithms—representing digital values with analogous physical lengths—soon appeared. In 1620 Edmund Gunter, the English mathematician who coined the terms cosine and cotangent, built a device for performing navigational calculations: the Gunter scale, or, as navigators simply called it, the gunter. About 1632 an English clergyman and mathematician named William Oughtred built the first slide rule, drawing on Napier’s ideas. That first slide rule was circular, but Oughtred also built the first rectangular one in 1633. The analog devices of Gunter and Oughtred had various advantages and disadvantages compared with digital devices such as the abacus. What is important is that the consequences of these design decisions were being tested in the real world.

Digital calculators: from the Calculating Clock to the Arithmometer

In 1623 the German astronomer and mathematician Wilhelm Schickard built the first calculator. He described it in a letter to his friend the astronomer Johannes Kepler, and in 1624 . .

5 0
3 years ago
How to make a website
hjlf

Answer:

You need an email and a job and to be over 18 for business ones or a legal gaurdian if you have none then ur hecced uwu :333

8 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Evaluating how current, credible, and unbiased a source is ensures:
Tanya [424]

The answer is

A. your information is more accurate and useful

I hope it helps you. Please mark me brainliest answer.

6 0
3 years ago
Drag the tiles to the correct boxes to complete the pairs.
Gala2k [10]

Answer:

So the first one i think is A. The second is 2, and that i do know

Explanation:

6 0
3 years ago
If you wish to include a header or footer on all pages in a publication, you will need to insert this by navigating to the _____
Marina86 [1]
If you wish to include a header or footer on all pages in a publication, you will need to insert this by navigation to the master page.
7 0
4 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Other questions:
  • Steve is proofreading his memo and he notices that he has typed a phrase twice. Steve should _____.
    5·2 answers
  • When transporting data from real-time applications, such as streaming audio and video, which field in the ipv6 header can be use
    12·1 answer
  • Laura wants to know more about the organization to which she has applied. What can she do to know more about the organization’s
    12·1 answer
  • Write a program whose input is two integers and whose output is the two integers swapped. Ex: If the input is: 3 8 then the outp
    12·1 answer
  • Why is the database management systems (dbms the heart of the database functionality?
    6·2 answers
  • _________________ ___________________ is an encrypted code that a person, website, or organization attaches to an electronic mes
    9·1 answer
  • A _________ is a component commonly used in an analog pressure gauge. Use letter keys to select choices A microprocessor B press
    8·1 answer
  • 1. Why do you need to take care of your computer? (Remember: Answer must include 3-5 sentences.)
    13·1 answer
  • KELLY Connect
    8·1 answer
  • These brainly bots need to stop!!
    14·1 answer
Add answer
Login
Not registered? Fast signup
Signup
Login Signup
Ask question!