Answer:
public class Brainly
{
public static void main(String[] args)
{
BinaryConverter conv = new BinaryConverter();
String binStr = "01001101";
System.out.print(binStr + " in decimal is "+conv.BinToDec(binStr));
}
}
public class BinaryConverter
{
public int BinToDec(String binStr)
{
int d = 0;
while(binStr.length() > 0)
{
d = (d << 1) + ((binStr.charAt(0) == '1') ? 1: 0);
binStr = binStr.substring(1);
}
return d;
}
}
Explanation:
The program "eats" the string from left to right, and builds up the integer representation in variable "d" on the go. While there are digits left, it shifts the previous result to the left and sets the least signficant bit to 1 only if the corresponding string character is a 1.
Optima battery because it is stronger than a factory battery
D. It’s a sketch. That is, if you talking about, an art piece.
Answer:
The C's malloc and free functions and the C++'s new and delete operators execute similar operations but in different ways and return results.
Explanation:
- The new and delete operators return a fully typed pointer while the malloc and free functions return a void pointer.
-The new and delete operators do not return a null value on failure but the malloc/free functions do.
- The new/delete operator memory is allocated from free store while the malloc/free functions allocate from heap.
- The new/delete operators can add a new memory allocator to help with low memory but the malloc/free functions can't.
- The compiler calculates the size of the new/delete operator array while the malloc/free functions manually calculate array size as specified.
Answer:
REad from slide and speak clearly and slowy.
Explanation: