What Occupies Your Mind?
What will be an ideal response?
What we think about is influenced by the information fed to our mind all day long. Web 2.0 has created numerous channels for people to offer their own work for free—opensource software, free music, books, and artwork. How has this affected your thinking? Have you created things to share freely with the online world? Has it changed the value you put on music, books, and art?
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(Bubble Sort Enhancements) The bubble sort described in Exercise 6.11 is inefficient for large arrays. Make the following simple modifications to improve the performance of the bubble sort:
a) After the first pass, the largest number is guaranteed to be in the highest-numbered element of the array; after the second pass, the two highest numbers are “in place,” and so on. Instead of making nine comparisons on every pass, modify the bubble sort to make eight comparisons on the second pass, seven on the third pass, and so on. b) The data in the array may already be in the proper order or near-proper order, so why make nine passes if fewer will suffice? Modify the sort to check at the end of each pass if any swaps have been made. If none have been made, then the data must already be in the proper order, so the program should terminate. If swaps have been made, then at least one more pass is needed.
Which of the following information should not be included on your resume?
a. Your contact information b. A list of your skills c. Education background d. Your social security number
What are the two golden rules that should guide you during any troubleshooting process? Describe each rule.
What will be an ideal response?
What should you divide content into using rules and active white space?
A. paragraphs B. sections C. columns D. rows