CIS 115 All Exercises Devry University (Devry) FOR MORE CLASSES VISIT CIS 115 All Exercises Devry University
CIS 115 All iLabs Devry University (Devry) FOR MORE CLASSES VISIT CIS 115 All iLabs Devry University
CIS 115 Entire Course: Devry University: All iLabs and Exercises (Devry) FOR MORE CLASSES VISIT CIS 115 Entire Course: Devry University: All iLabs and Exercises
CIS 115 Final Exam 1 (Devry) FOR MORE CLASSES VISIT 1. (TCO 1) What does IPO of IPO Model stand for? (Points : 4) 2. (TCO 1) What is a data item with a name and a value that remain the same during the execution of a program? (Points : 4) 3. (TCO 1) What symbol in a flowchart would be used
CIS 115 Final Exam 2 (Devry) FOR MORE CLASSES VISIT 1. What is the first step in software development? 2. What are named locations in a computer’s memory holding information required by a program? 3. What symbol in a flowchart would be used by a developer
CIS 115 Final Exam 3 (Devry) FOR MORE CLASSES VISIT 1. (TCO 1) When creating an IPO Model, program designers generally determine _____ last. (Points : 4) 2. (TCO 1) What is a data item with a name and a value that remain the same during the execution of a program? (Points : 4)
CIS 115 Final Exam 3 Sets of Answers (Devry) FOR MORE CLASSES VISIT CIS 115 Final Exam 3 Sets of Answers
CIS 115 Week 1 Exercise (Devry) FOR MORE CLASSES VISIT Assignment: This activity will assist you in the understanding of how output should appear after statements are executed (results) and how to write proper pseudocode. 1. Show the result of each pseudocode program.
CIS 115 Week 1 iLab 1 (Devry) FOR MORE CLASSES VISIT A. Lab #: CIS CIS 115-A1 B. Lab 1 of 1 : Fireworks Stand Checkout C. Lab Overview – Scenario / Summary:
CIS 115 Week 2 Exercise (Devry) FOR MORE CLASSES VISIT Given a simple business problem, design a solution algorithm that uses arithmetic expressions and built-in functions.
CIS 115 Week 2 Lab Total Meal Purchases (Devry) FOR MORE CLASSES VISIT Scenario/Summary Your goal is to solve the following simple programming exercise. You have been contracted by a local antique store to design an algorithm determining the total purchases and sales tax. According to the store owner, the user will need to see the subtotal, the sales tax amount, and the total purchase amount. A customer is purchasing
CIS 115 Week 3 Exercise (Devry) FOR MORE CLASSES VISIT Week 3 Activity – Calculate Overtime Pay TCO #4 – Given a simple business problem that requires one or more decisions, create a solution algorithm that uses decisions with logical and relational expressions. TCO #9 – Given a program with logic errors that is intended as a solution to a simple business problem, employ debugging diagnostics to remove and correct the errors. Assignment: You will need to design an application
CIS 115 Week 3 Lab Decision Calendar (Devry) FOR MORE CLASSES VISIT i L A B O V E R V I E W Scenario/Summary Your goal is to solve the following programming lab activity. Write a program that prompts and accepts a number between 1 and 12. After getting the input, display the number with the appropriate month. (example: This is the 1st month…January, This is the 2nd month…February, This is the 12th month…December).
CIS 115 Week 4 Exercise (Devry) FOR MORE CLASSES VISIT TCO #4 – Given a simple business problem that requires one or more decisions, create a solution algorithm that uses decisions with logical and relational expressions. TCO #9 – Given a program with logic errors that is intended as a solution to a simple business problem, employ debugging diagnostics to remove and correct the
CIS 115 Week 4 Lab Grade Calendar (Devry) FOR MORE CLASSES VISIT You have been asked to design a program that will allow a teacher to calculate the percentage and the final grade for students in a class. The program will prompt the teacher to enter the student’s first and last name and the number of points the student received. The program shall only accept scores between 0 and 1,000 points (including 0 and 1,000), with 1,000 points being the maximum
CIS 115 Week 5 Exercise (Devry) FOR MORE CLASSES VISIT Assignment (part A): Your goal is to solve the following simple programming exercise. Using a FOR loop, write an algorithm that displays the squares of the numbers 1 to 10 to console output. Thought provoking question: Do you need to accept input? Assignment (part B): Using a pretest WHILE loop, write an algorithm that displays the squares of the numbers
CIS 115 Week 5 Lab Fireworks Stand Checkout (Devry) FOR MORE CLASSES VISIT Your algorithm will keep track of a customer’s purchases at the local fireworks stand. Customers will not know exactly how many items they will purchase, so using a for-loop on this lab is not allowed. Let’s keep the rules simple.
CIS 115 Week 6 Exercise (Devry) FOR MORE CLASSES VISIT Assignment: Arrays are incredible fun! Today we are going to work on a program to keep track of our homework scores for a math class. Write a program that accepts five homework scores as input values and stores them into a table (which is another name for an array). Once the scores are in the array, we can process them again and again.
CIS 115 Week 6 Lab Fireworks Stand Checkout (Devry) FOR MORE CLASSES VISIT Your algorithm will keep track of a customer’s purchases at the local fireworks stand. Customers will not know exactly how many items they will purchase, so using a for-loop on this lab is not allowed. Let’s keep the rules simple.
CIS 115 Week 7 Exercise (Devry) FOR MORE CLASSES VISIT Assignment: Your goal is to solve the following simple programming exercise. You have been asked by your accounting department to design an algorithm determining the annual profit for your company. The algorithm should ask the user for the projected monthly sales for 12 months. Then, you need to determine the annual
CIS 115 Week 7 Lab Fireworks Stand Checkout (Devry) FOR MORE CLASSES VISIT In this lab, you are going to extend the Fireworks Checkout Stand application in Week 6. This week, we will be more efficient by using files and modularizing the program. This week, we will also load our array of valid zip codes from a text file. In addition, we will modify the existing code to create a modularized design.