Answer:
D. Computers
Explanation:
Digital art is when you make art on electronic devices.
I’m pretty sure it would be an insert tab
By default, if you do not implement a constructor, the compiler will use an empty constructor (no parameters and no code). The following code will create an instance of the MyObject class using the default constructor. The object will have the default vauesfor all the attributes since no parameters were given.
MyObject obj = new MyObject();
Another type of constructor is one with no parameters (no-arg constructor). It is similar to the default, except you actually create this constructor. The contents of the the constructor may include anything. To call a no-arg constructor, use the same line of code as above. The constructor can look like the one below:
public MyObject() {
System.out.println("This is a no-arg constructor");
}
Lastly there is the parameterized constructor. This type of constructor takes in parameters as inputs to assign to values in the newly created object. You call a parameterized constructor as follows:
MyObject obj = new MyObject("Bob", 20);
The constructor will look like this:
public MyObject(String name, int age) {
this.name = name;
this.age = age;
}
In the constructor, the keyword "this" refers to the object, so this.name is a private global variable that is being set equal to the inputted value for name, in this case "Bob".
Hope this helps!
Answer:
a) Yes
b) Yes
c) Yes
d) No
e) Yes
f) No
Explanation:
a) All single-bit errors are caught by Cyclic Redundancy Check (CRC) and it produces 100 % of error detection.
b) All double-bit errors for any reasonably long message are caught by Cyclic Redundancy Check (CRC) during the transmission of 1024 bit. It also produces 100 % of error detection.
c) 5 isolated bit errors are not caught by Cyclic Redundancy Check (CRC) during the transmission of 1024 bit since CRC may not be able to catch all even numbers of isolated bit errors so it is not even.
It produces nearly 100 % of error detection.
d) All even numbers of isolated bit errors may not be caught by Cyclic Redundancy Check (CRC) during the transmission of 1024 bit. It also produces 100 % of error detection.
e) All burst errors with burst lengths less than or equal to 32 are caught by Cyclic Redundancy Check (CRC) during the transmission of 1024 bit. It also produces 100 % of error detection.
f) A burst error with burst length greater than 32 may not be caught by Cyclic Redundancy Check (CRC) during the transmission of 1024 bit.
Cyclic Redundancy Check (CRC) does not detect the length of error burst which is greater than or equal to r bits.