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xeze [42]
3 years ago
6

Which of the following is true about named ranges?

Computers and Technology
1 answer:
ohaa [14]3 years ago
5 0

Answer:

Regarding a named range, the scope of a name is the location within which Excel recognizes the name without qualification. ... Once you name a range, you can change the size of the range using the Name Manager. True. You can create a new range by selecting the cells and typing a name in the Name box next to the formula bar ...

This is true about a range names. Hoped this helped a little. Im not sure which following you mean. maybe next time you can put a picture or descirbe it a little more or what the otions are.

I Hope You Have a Good Day or Night!! :)

Explanation:

You might be interested in
What activities are the most likely to infect your computer vith a virus? Check all that apply.
Gnesinka [82]

Answer:A,B,E

Explanation:

I just took the quiz

5 0
4 years ago
The L-exclusion problem is a variant of the starvation-free mutual exclusion problem. We make two changes: as many as L threads
vladimir2022 [97]

Answer:

The solution is as follows.

class LFilters implements Lock {

int[] lvl;

int[] vic;

public LFilters(int n, int l) {

lvl = new int[max(n-l+1,0)];

vic = new int[max(n-l+1,0)];

for (int i = 0; i < n-l+1; i++) {

lvl[i] = 0;

}

}

public void lock() {

int me = ThreadID.get();

for (int i = 1; i < n-l+1; i++) { // attempt level i

lvl[me] = i;

vic[i] = me;

// rotate while conflicts exist

int above = l+1;

while (above > l && vic[i] == me) {

above = 0;

for (int k = 0; k < n; k++) {

if (lvl[k] >= i) above++;

}

}

}

}

public void unlock() {

int me = ThreadID.get();

lvl[me] = 0;

}

}

Explanation:

The code is presented above in which the a class is formed which has two variables, lvl and vic. It performs the operation of lock as indicated above.

6 0
3 years ago
Some of the latest smartphones claim that a user can work with two apps simultaneously. This would be an example of a unit that
SIZIF [17.4K]

Answer:

MULTITASKING OS

Explanation:

MULTITASKING OPERATING SYSTEM is an operating system that enables and allow user of either a smartphone or computer to make use of more that one applications program at a time.

Example with MULTITASKING OPERATING SYSTEM smartphones user can easily browse the internet with two applications program like chrome and Firefox at a time or simultaneously

Therefore a user working with two apps simultaneously is an example of a unit that uses a MULTITASKING OS.

3 0
3 years ago
There will be 10 numbers stored contiguously in the computer at location x 7000 . Write a complete LC-3 program, starting at loc
Artist 52 [7]

Answer:

The LC-3 (Little Computer 3) is an ISA definition for a 16-bit computer. Its architecture includes physical memory mapped I/O via a keyboard and display; TRAPs to the operating system for handling service calls; conditional branches on N, Z, and P condition codes; a subroutine call/return mechanism; a minimal set of operation instructions (ADD, AND, and NOT); and various addressing modes for loads and stores (direct, indirect, Base+offset, PC-relative, and an immediate mode for loading effective addresses). Programs written in LC-3 assembler execute out of a 65536 word memory space. All references to memory, from loading instructions to loading and storing register values, pass through the get Mem Adr() function. The hardware/software function of Project 5 is to translate virtual addresses to physical addresses in a restricted memory space. The following is the default, pass-through, MMU code for all memory references by the LC-3 simulator.

unsigned short int get Mem Adr(int va, int rwFlg)

{

unsigned short int pa;

// Warning: Use of system calls that can cause context switches may result in address translation failure

// You should only need to use gittid() once which has already been called for you below. No other syscalls

// are necessary.

TCB* tcb = get TCB();

int task RPT = tcb [gettid()].RPT;

pa = va;

// turn off virtual addressing for system RAM

if (va < 0x3000) return &memory[va];

return &memory[pa];

} // end get MemAdr

Simple OS, Tasks, and the LC-3 Simulator

We introduce into our simple-os a new task that is an lc3 Task. An lc3 Task is a running LC-3 simulator that executes an LC-3 program loaded into the LC-3 memory. The memory for the LC-3 simulator, however, is a single global array. This single global array for memory means that alllc3 Tasks created by the shell use the same memory for their programs. As all LC-3 programs start at address 0x3000 in LC-3, each task overwrites another tasks LC-3 program when the scheduler swaps task. The LC-3 simulator (lc3 Task) invokes the SWAP command every several LC-3 instruction cycles. This swap invocation means the scheduler is going to be swapping LC-3 tasks before the tasks actually complete execution so over writing another LC-3 task's memory in the LC-3 simulator is not a good thing.

You are going to implement virtual memory for the LC-3 simulator so up to 32 LC-3 tasks can be active in the LC-3 simulator memory without corrupting each others data. To implement the virtual memory, we have routed all accesses to LC-3 memory through a get Mem Adr function that is the MMU for the LC-3 simulator. In essence, we now have a single LC-3 simulator with a single unified global memory array yet we provide multi-tasking in the simulator for up to 32 LC-3 programs running in their own private address space using virtual memory.

We are implementing a two level page table for the virtual memory in this programming task. A two level table relies on referring to two page tables both indexed by separate page numbers to complete an address translation from a virtual to a physical address. The first table is referred to as the root page table or RPT for short. The root page table is a fixed static table that always resides in memory. There is exactly one RPT per LC-3 task. Always.

The memory layout for the LC=3 simulator including the system (kernel) area that is always resident and non-paged (i.e., no virtual address translation).

The two figures try to illustrate the situation. The lower figure below demonstrates the use of the two level page table. The RPT resident in non-virtual memory is first referenced to get the address of the second level user page table or (UPT) for short. The right figure in purple and green illustrates the memory layout more precisely. Anything below the address 0x3000 is considered non-virtual. The address space is not paged. The memory in the region 0x2400 through 0x3000 is reserved for the RPTs for up to thirty-two LC-3 tasks. These tables are again always present in memory and are not paged. Accessing any RPT does not require any type of address translation.

The addresses that reside above 0x3000 require an address translation. The memory area is in the virtual address space of the program. This virtual address space means that a UPT belonging to any given task is accessed using a virtual address. You must use the RPT in the system memory to keep track of the correct physical address for the UPT location. Once you have the physical address of the UPT you can complete the address translation by finding the data frame and combining it with the page offset to arrive at your final absolute physical address.

A Two-level page table for virtual memory management.

x7000 123F x7000 0042

x7001 6534 x7001 6534

x7002 300F x7002 300F

x7003 4005 after the program is run, memory x7003 4005

x7004 3F19

7 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Tuesday
4vir4ik [10]

Answer:

?

Explanation:

these are instructions to a question?

7 0
3 years ago
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