Answer:
=IF(D3>50; E3; F3) and =IF(A1>60;"Pass";"Fail") are valid IF formulas.
Explanation:
P.S - The exact question is -
To find - Select the correct answer from each drop-down menu. Which IF formulas are valid? _____ and _____ are valid IF formulas.
FIRST BLANK
=IF(D3>50; E3; F3)
=IF(D3>50);( E3; F3)
=IF(10<5;23);("Incorrect")
SECOND BLANK
=IF(A1>60;"Pass";"Fail")
=IF(A1>60); ("Pass"; "Fail")
=IF(A1>60; ("Pass"; "Fail"))
Solution -
An IF structure is built following this pattern:
IF(TEST;IF TRUE;IF FALSE)
So,
The correct option is -
=IF(D3>50; E3; F3) and =IF(A1>60;"Pass";"Fail") are valid IF formulas.
Answer:
Following are the program in python language the name of the program is factors.py
num= int(input("Please enter a positive integer: "))#Read the number by user
print("The factors of ",num,"are:")
for k in range(2,num): #iterating over the loop
if(num%k==0): #checking the condition
print(k)#display the factor
Output:
Please enter a positive integer: 12
The factors of 12 are:
2
3
4
6
Explanation:
Following are the description of the program
- Read the number by user in the "num" variable
- Iterating the for loop from k=2 to less then "num".
- In the for loop checking the factor of "num" variable by using % operator.
- Finally display the factor by using print function
Answer:
Join
Explanation:
Five basic set operators in relational algebra are as follows:
- Selection - tuple selection
- Projection - extract columns
- Cartesian product - cross product of relations
- Set union - union of two relations
- Set difference - minus operation on two relations
As we can see, Join is not part of the basic set operations but it is implemented using the Cartesian Product operator.
Answer:
Serif without kerning is the first one
Italic is the second one
Bold is the third one
Serif with kerning is the fourth one
Explanation:
I had this question and got this correct