False,
" I am talking about 20-30+ millions lines of code, software at the scale and complexity of Autodesk Maya for example.
If you freeze the development as long as it needs to be, can you actually fix all the bugs until there is simply not a single bug, if such a thing could be verified by computers? What are the arguments for and against the existence of a bug-free system?
Because there is some notion that every fix you make creates more bugs, but I don't think that's true.
By bugs I meant from the simplest typos in the UI, to more serious preventative bugs that has no workaround. For example a particular scripting function calculates normal incorrectly. Also even when there are workarounds, the problem still has to be fixed. So you could say you can do this particular thing manually instead of using the provided function but that function still has to be fixed."
work cited:
https://softwareengineering.stackexchange.com/questions/195571/is-it-possible-to-reach-absolute-zero-bug-state-for-large-scale-software
Answer:
actual_value = float(input("Enter the actual value of a piece of property: "))
tax_rate = float(input("Enter the current tax rate for each $100.00 of assessed value: "))
assessed_value = actual_value * 0.6
tax = (assessed_value * tax_rate) / 100
print("The annual property tax is $" + str(tax))
Explanation:
*The code is in Python.
Ask the user to enter the actual value and the tax rate
Calculate the assessed value, multiply the actual value by 0.6
Calculate the tax, multiply the assessed value by the tax rate and divide result by 100
Print the tax
Answer:
answer my question
Explanation:
<h3>open my account. i need help.</h3>