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Marat540 [252]
3 years ago
8

Why is it that we park our vehicles on a driveway, but we drive our vehicles on a parkway?

Engineering
1 answer:
kati45 [8]3 years ago
3 0

Answer:

d

Explanation:

d

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Aleksandr [31]
Hey, it depends what you subscribed to, or what platform you are trying to unsubscribe from?
7 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
The following C program asks the user for two input null-terminated strings, each stored in uninitialized 100-byte buffer, and c
marissa [1.9K]

Answer:

Code is given below:

Explanation:

.data  

str1: .space 20  

str2: .space 20  

msg1:.asciiz "Please enter string (max 20 characters): "  

msg2: .asciiz "\n Please enter string (max 20 chars): "  

msg3:.asciiz "\nSAME"  

msg4:.asciiz "\nNOT SAME"  

.text

.globl main

main:  

   li $v0,4        #loads msg1  

   la $a0,msg1  

   syscall

   li $v0,8

   la $a0,str1

   addi $a1,$zero,20

   syscall          #got string to manipulate

   li $v0,4        #loads msg2

   la $a0,msg2

   syscall

   li $v0,8

   la $a0,str2

   addi $a1,$zero,20

   syscall         #got string  

       la $a0,str1             #pass address of str1  

   la $a1,str2         #pass address of str2  

   jal methodComp      #call methodComp  

   beq $v0,$zero,ok    #check result  

   li $v0,4

   la $a0,msg4

   syscall

   j exit

ok:  

   li $v0,4  

   la $a0,msg3  

   syscall  

exit:  

   li $v0,10  

   syscall  

methodComp:  

   add $t0,$zero,$zero  

   add $t1,$zero,$a0  

   add $t2,$zero,$a1  

loop:  

   lb $t3($t1)         #load a byte from each string  

   lb $t4($t2)  

   beqz $t3,checkt2    #str1 end  

   beqz $t4,missmatch  

   slt $t5,$t3,$t4     #compare two bytes  

   bnez $t5,missmatch  

   addi $t1,$t1,1      #t1 points to the next byte of str1  

   addi $t2,$t2,1  

   j loop  

missmatch:    

   addi $v0,$zero,1  

   j endfunction  

checkt2:  

   bnez $t4,missmatch  

   add $v0,$zero,$zero  

endfunction:  

   jr $ra

3 0
3 years ago
If 200 amperes flow from the positive terminal of a battery and operate the starter motor, how many amperes will flow back to th
garri49 [273]

Answer:

200 Amperes WB =<em> </em>200J

Explanation:

200 Amperes will flow back to the negative terminal because both the positive terminal and negative terminal contain the equivalent amount of current that will flow and it works in the starter motor.

To learn more about it, refer

to brainly.com/question/6561461

#SPJ4

5 0
2 years ago
A sample of sand weighs 490 g in stock and 475 in Oven Dry (OD) condition, respectively. If absorption capability of the sand is
Ivahew [28]

The weight of the specimen in SSD condition is 373.3 cc

<u>Explanation</u>:

a) Apparent specific gravity = \frac{A}{A-C}

Where,

A = mass of oven dried test sample in air = 1034 g

B = saturated surface test sample in air = 1048.9 g

C = apparent mass of saturated test sample in water = 975.6 g

apparent specific gravity = \frac{A}{A-C}

                                         = \frac{1034}{1034-675 \cdot 6}

Apparent specific gravity = 2.88

b) Bulk specific gravity G_{B}^{O D}=\frac{A}{B-C}

G_{B}^{O D}=\frac{1034}{1048.9-675 \cdot 6}

       =  2.76

c) Bulk specific gravity (SSD):

G_{B}^{S S D}=\frac{B}{B-C}

=\frac{1048 \cdot 9}{1048 \cdot 9-675 \cdot 6}

G_{B}^{S S D} = 2.80

d) Absorption% :

=\frac{B-A}{A} \times 100 \%

=\frac{1048 \cdot 9-1034}{1034} \times 100

Absorption = 1.44 %

e) Bulk Volume :

v_{b}=\frac{\text { weight of dispaced water }}{P \omega t}

=\frac{1048 \cdot 9-675 \cdot 6}{1}

= 373.3 cc

5 0
3 years ago
At an axial load of 22 kN, a 15-mm-thick × 40-mm-wide polyimide polymer bar elongates 4.1 mm while the bar width contracts 0.15
Alenkasestr [34]

Answer:

The Poisson's Ratio of the bar is 0.247

Explanation:

The Poisson's ratio is got by using the formula

Lateral strain / longitudinal strain

Lateral strain = elongation / original width (since we are given the change in width as a result of compession)

Lateral strain = 0.15mm / 40 mm =0.00375

Please note that strain is a dimensionless quantity, hence it has no unit.

The Longitudinal strain is the ratio of the elongation to the original length in the longitudinal direction.

Longitudinal strain = 4.1 mm / 270 mm = 0.015185

Hence, the Poisson's ratio of the bar is 0.00375/0.015185 = 0.247

The Poisson's Ratio of the bar is 0.247

Please note also that this quantity also does not have a dimension

3 0
3 years ago
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