The answer is A. Comments about her past job and work performance.
Full question:
Assume you are using the text's array-based queue and have just instantiated a queue of capacity 10. You enqueue 5 elements and then deque 2 elements. Which indices of the internal array elements hold the remaining elements? a) 0 to 2 b) 7 to 9 c) 2 to 4 d) 1 to 3
Answer and Explanation:
If you instantiate a capacity of 10 for the queue, you have the queue a capacity of not more than 10 values.
To enqueue means to add an element to the array(if it's not full, n<10)
To dequeue means to delete an element from the array or queue(if n! =0)
From the question, for example:
We create a queue of capacity 10:
Queue q(10);
We add elements/enqueue 5 elements to the queue :
q.queueEnqueue(10);
q.queueEnqueue(5);
q.queueEnqueue(8);
q.queueEnqueue(9);
q.queueEnqueue(2);
If we print this out:
q. queueDisplay()
We would get:
10, 5, 8, 9, 2
We remove elements/dequeue 2 elements from the queue :
q. queuedequeue();
q. queuedequeue();
We print it out:
q. queueDisplay()
8 ,9, 2
We observe that deletion/dequeue starts from the front/first index.
We are left with indices 2, 3, 4 or 2 to 4
Note: the above methods/ functions and objects used are merely for example purposes. The queue uses a floating front design approach.
On windows, it is the type command.
On linux, the cat command outputs the file.
All bytes that represent printable characters will be displayed as ASCII or even Unicode.
Answer:
Explanation:
This is unsolvable if you have no variable substitutes