...9 6 3 4 10 5 DESCRIPTION 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Length of half-pipe Slope angle Width (crown to crown) Width of decks Height (floor to crown) Height of vertical Drop-in ramp length Drop-in ramp width Drop-in ramp height RECOMMENDED (18 FT PIPE) RECOMMENDED (22 FT PIPE) 100 - 150 m 16° - 17° 17.5 - 18 m 6 - 7.5 m 18 ft (5.4 m) 0.2 m 15 m 10 m at least 5.5 m 120 - 165 m 17.5° - 18.5° 19.5 m 6 - 7.5 m 22 ft (6.5 m) 0.2 m 15 m 10 m at least 5.5 m at least 9 m 10 Distance from ramp to pipe at least 9 m 2 IN GROUND BASE DIMENSIONS 4 1 1 3 3 2 2 4 6 6 5 5 7 7 8 8 4 5 6 2 7 8 1 3 9 11 9 11 2 12 10 1 10 1 2 Important Note! Building in-ground walls is optional, and it will save 12 9 10 a considerable amount of snow-making. Be aware that the ground will cause the snow to melt faster, and if the base isn’t deep enough 11 the dirt walls will appear prematurely. DESCRIPTION 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Length of half-pipe Height 100 - 150 m 2 5m 16° - 17° at least 9 m 25° 8° 10 m at least 5.5 m 24 m at least 5 m 14 m at least 45° 1 RECOMMENDED (18 FT PIPE) RECOMMENDED (22 FT PIPE) 120 - 165 m 6m 17.5° - 18.5° at least 9 m 25° 8° 10 m at least 5.5 m 26 m at least 5 m 16 m at least 45° 12 Slope angle Distance from ramp to pipe Drop-in ramp angle Angle from ramp to pipe Drop-in ramp width Drop-in ramp height Width (crown to crown) 10 Width of decks 11 Width of floor 12 Dirt wall angle 3 SNOW DEPTH 5 4 3 2 1 DESCRIPTION ...
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...Experiment 7: Deflection of beams (Effect of beam length and width) 1. OBJECTIVE The objective of this laboratory experiment is to find the relationship between the deflection (y) at the centre of a simply supported beam and the span, width. 2. MATERIALS - APPARATUS Steel Beams, Deflection measuring device, 500g weight 3. INTRODUCTORY INFORMATION The deflection of a beam, y, will depend on many factors such as: - • The applied load F (F=m•g). • The span L. • The width of the beam b, and its thickness h. Other factors such as position, method of loading, the material of which the beam is made will also influence the deflection. If we wish to find the relationship between y and one of the possible variables it is necessary to keep all the other possible variables constant throughout the experiment. 1. Length calculation In this experiment the same beam is used throughout and the centrally applied point load is kept constant. Thus keeping all possible variables other than the deflection y and the span L constant we may investigate the relationship between y and L. Let y[pic]Ln where n is to be found Then y = k•Ln where k is a constant Taking logarithms: log y = n log L + log k which is in the straight line form (y = mx + C). Thus plotting logy against log L will give a straight-line graph of slope “n” and “k” may be determined. 2. Width calculation In this experiment beams of the same material but of different width are...
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...Program that will calculate the number of square feet (living space) in a 4-room house. Problem Analysis In this Program , the aim is to calculate the square feet of a 4 –room house So we need to know each rooms length and breadth , then calculate each rom’s area and the find the sum of those Area of Room1=length1*breadth1 Area of Room2=length2*breadth2 Area of Room3=length3*breadth3 Area of Room4=length4*breadth4 Total Number of Square Foots = Area of Room1+ Area of Room2+ Area of Room3+ Area of Room4 Program Design Pseudocode Start Declare the variables i,j as interger length[4], breadth[4],area[4] as double array sum as double Display “Enter the Rooms length and Breadth” For i= 1 to 4 do Accept length[i], breadth[i] Next i Display “Finding Area and total number of square foots” Set sum=0 For i= 1 to 4 do Area[i]= length[i]* breadth[i] Sum=sum+Area[i] Next i Display “Total number of square foots”, sum Stop Program Comments and Test Data C++ code #include<iostream> #include<string> using namespace std; int main() { int i,j; double length[4], breadth[4] ,area[4], sum; cout<<"\nEnter the length and breadth of each room"; for (i=0;i<4;i++) { cout<<"\nRoom "<<i+1<<" Length :"; cin >>length[i]; cout<<"\nRoom "<<i+1<<" Breadth :"; cin >>breadth[i]; } sum=0; for (i=0;i<4;i++) { area[i]=length[i]* breadth[i]; ...
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...HELPIDO.COM http://helpido.com/comp-274-week-5/ COMP274 COMP/274 COMP 274 WEEK 5 PROGRAMMING ASSIGNMENT ________________________________________ Timer and Mouse Events and Java Graphics Introduction The purpose of this week’s programming assignment is to learn how to deal with events from multiple sources. In addition, we will learn how to use some of Java’s graphics capabilities for drawing shapes in a display area. The programming assignment for this week is to implement a simple paddle ball game. Paddle Ball Game Overview The paddle ball game is a simplification of the Pong game. In the Pong game, a ball is moving around the display, bouncing off walls. The player moves a paddle in one dimension, trying to hit the ball whenever possible. If the ball hits the paddle, it bounces off and continues on its way. If the paddle misses the ball, the ball goes off the end of the display area and the player loses a point. In our paddle ball game, the ball moves around the display, bouncing off walls just as in the Pong game. The player controls a paddle trying to hit the ball just like in the Pong game. If the ball hits the paddle, it bounces off and continues on its way. The main difference in our game is that if the player misses the ball, the ball simply bounces off the wall behind the paddle and continues to travel. There is no scoring in this game. Object Oriented Design If we analyze the game description we can see there are several different objects...
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...When starting this program I had to look at how people would insert the information. Typically, you would assume that a person would input the length and width for a rectangle asa positive whole number, but this isn’t always the case. To deal with these cases, I had to implement two different features. The first feature to deal with none whole numbers is to make all of the numbers as floats. These variables are therefore float length, float width, float area, float perimeter.After making the numbers floats, a user can input any number even if it has a decimal. The second was to input a while loop after each user input for length and width in order to deal with the possibility of a negative number. A rectangle cannot have a negative or zero side so the while loop deals with this by asking the user to another number for length or width. After this has been completed it is necessary to send both of the numbers to the functions. To find the area, you take the length and width and multiply them together which gives you the area or Area = Length * Width. An example of this is below: Area = Length * Width User Input: Length = 2 & Width = 4 Area = 2 * 4 Area = 8 To find the Perimeter of a rectangle however, it is a bit different. To find the Perimeter you have to use the following formula P = 2(Length) + 2(Width). You use this formula due to the fact that you have 2 sides which are measured for the length and 2 sides which are measured for the width. An example of this is...
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...Peter Doyle CMIS 102 Prof. Tanney HW1 Purpose of the program This program will be used to determine the square feet of usable space in each individual room and those values will be added together to get the total usable area of square feet in house with length and width values of up to four rooms being the only known value BEGIN define variables for rooms and total usable space room numbers and area of each room will be will be represented by integers r1 through r4 total usable area in the house will be represented by Usable_space which define variables of length and width for r1-r4, integer l1,l2,l3,l4,w1,w2,w3,w4 //the values for length and width will be added by user input l1,w1,l2,w2,l3,w3,l4,w4 //Length will be known as L and will have the integers of L1 through L4. L1through L4 will correspsond to the the integer “L” with the same number //Width will be known as “W” and will have the integers of w1 through w4 with the numbers corresponding to the integer “w” with the same number r1=L1*w1; r2=L2*w2; r3=L3*w3; r4=L4*w4; define formula to get total usable square feet Usable_space=(r1+r2+r3+r4); Have program show with printf command Usable square feet for each room and total usable square feet: “ The individual rooms r1-r4’s (respectively) usable area in square feet is r1,r2,r3,r4. The total usable square feet of your house with those given values is Usable_space.” END Code and run test cases. If successful code is good to go. Test case...
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...Problem Statement: It is clearly that the rectangular has either the length is longer than the width, or the width is longer than the length. It depends on the rectangular is in horizontal or vertical position. In this assignment the rectangular is in the horizontal position that means the length is longer than the width. This rectangular has length 4m for each side and width 3m for each side. Now, the program will be written by using functions that calculates the area and perimeter of a rectangular. Analysis: For the space problem, we need to output the area of the following variables: + Name of the area is calculated, GetArea (as string) + The length of rectangular, LenRec (as float) + The width of rectangular, WidRec (as float) + The total length of rectangle, Total2L (as float) + The total width of rectangle, Total2W (as float) + The perimeter of rectangle. PerRec (as string) The necessary input to the program: + In order to output the rectangle’s area (GetArea), the program must know what it is, so the string Area must be input by the user. + To compute the usable area of rectangular, the program must know how many sides in the rectangle. We have LenRec and WidRec are float variable and are also input data. + To compute the rectangle’s perimeter (PerRec), the program must know what it is, so the string perimeter must be input by the user. Obtaining the Necessary Formulas: The rectangular...
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...Associate Program Material Appendix E System-Level Requirements Example Consider the Input and Output Process Example program in Appendix B, in which you developed what are often called system-level requirements: the basis for all subsequent analysis and design steps. The following steps will take these system-level requirements and refine them into a detailed blueprint for the program. Up to this point, you have identified the processes the program must perform, but you have not given any consideration to exactly how the processes work together to solve the problem. At this point, you must generate a description of the processing using pseudocode, a natural language description of the processing the application must perform. The natural place to start is the system-level requirements you identified in the input-process-output (IPO) chart. Determine how the processes work together: Once you have determined the top-level logic, you can design each individual process. This step-wise refinement process allows you to conceptualize a vague problem into increasing levels of details to actually generate a working program. This point is important because the step-wise refinement process is used throughout the entire program development—each new piece of information is based on, and is a refinement of, the information uncovered in the previous step. For this week’s CheckPoint, you will refine the IPO table into a complete design, as demonstrated on pp. 80 & 83 in Ch. 2...
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...Program that will calculate the number of square feet (living space) in a 4-room house. Problem Analysis In this Program , the aim is to calculate the square feet of a 4 –room house So we need to know each room’s length and breadth, then calculate each room’s area and the find the sum of those Area of Room1=length1*breadth1 Area of Room2=length2*breadth2 Area of Room3=length3*breadth3 Area of Room4=length4*breadth4 Total Number of Square Foots = Area of Room1+ Area of Room2+ Area of Room3+ Area of Room4 Program Design Pseudocode Start Declare the variables i,j as interger length[4], breadth[4],area[4] as double array sum as double Display “Enter the Rooms length and Breadth” For i= 1 to 4 do Accept length[i], breadth[i] Next i Display “Finding Area and total number of square foots” Set sum=0 For i= 1 to 4 do Area[i]= length[i]* breadth[i] Sum=sum+Area[i] Next i Display “Total number of square foots”, sum Stop Program Comments and Test Data Test data and Output Example application test data: Input: Room length and width (in feet) Expected output: Total square footage of house (in square feet) Room1: length=10, width=14; Room 2: length=9, width=10; Room 3: length=12, width=12; Room 4: length=11, width=9 473 Room1: length=20, width=10; Room 2: length=15, width=10; Room 3: length=20, width=10; Room 4: length=30, width=10 850 Room1: length=20, width=15; Room 2: length=10, width=5; Room 3: length=30...
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...CMIS102 Homework Assignment 1 (Worth 13% of your grade) Problem definition: Calculate the usable area in square feet of house. Assume that the house has a maximum of four rooms, and that each room is rectangular. A. Problem Analysis – Following the directions in the assignment, clearly write up your problem analysis in this section. In order to determine the usable area of the house I must first find out what is the total square feet area of each of the four rooms. I know that to get the area of each room I have to multiply LengthFeet X WidthFeet and that will give me the area of a 1 Room. Then I must do this to all four rooms, therefore, the results of the total area of the four rooms will give me the usable area of the house. My output variables are: UsableAreaFeet (float variable), AreaOfRoomFeet (float variable). Input variables: Length (float variable) and Width (float variable) and AreaOfRoomFeet (float variable). Formulas need it: AreaOfRoomX=Length X Width Where X is rooms 1-4, UsableAreaFeet=AreaOfRoom1Feet + AreaOfRoom2Feet + AreaOfRoom3Feet + AreaOfRoom4Feet B. Program Design – Following the directions in the assignment, clearly write up your problem design in this section and comment your pseudocode. PseudoCode Input Data Module: Input: LengthFeet, WidthFeet, AreaOfRoomXFeet Perform Calculations Module Compute: AreaOfRoomXFeet Here the formula use will be AreaOfRoomX = Length X Width Compute: UsableAreaFeet Here I will use...
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...CMIS102 Homework Assignment 1 (Worth 13% of your grade) Problem definition: Calculate the usable area in square feet of house. Assume that the house has a maximum of four rooms, and that each room is rectangular. A. Problem Analysis – Following the directions in the assignment, clearly write up your problem analysis in this section. You need to determine the area of 4 rooms added together so you will need to allow the user to input both length and width for 4 separate rooms. You will then need to write code to multiply the length and width of each room separately and then add all four together. All variables will need to be float in anticipation of fractions of feet. length1 = first room length width1 = first room width area1 = area of first room length2 = second room length width2 = second room width area2 = area of second room length3 = third room length width3 = third room width area3 = area of third room length4 = fourth room length width4 = fourth room width area4 = area of fourth room totalarea = final output variable for total square feet of home B. Program Design – Following the directions in the assignment, clearly write up your problem design in this section and comment your pseudocode. Main Write "What is the room one's length in feet?" Declare length1 As Float Input length1 Write "What is the room one's width in feet?" Declare width1 As Float Input width1 Declare area1 As Float Set...
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...CMIS102 Homework Assignment 1 Student Name: Neal Fowler Class/Section: CMIS 102 Section 6385 Professor Name: Marie Arvi Assignment due date: 6 January 2014 Problem definition: Calculate the usable area in square feet of house. Assume that the house has a maximum of four rooms, and that each room is rectangular. A. Problem Analysis: What is the required output? Total square footage of a house (in square feet) What is the necessary input? Room 1, 2, 3, and 4 length and width. How will we obtain output from input? Each room length and width input multiplied. Next all four rooms total add together for output. B. Program Design: 1. Input data: Input the variables Rm1L, Rm1W, Rm2L, Rm2W, Rm3L, Rm3W, Rm4L, Rm4W 2. Perform calculations: where… Rm1sqft = Rm1L * Rm1W, Rm2sqft = Rm2L * Rm2W, Rm3sqft = Rm3L * Rm3W, Rm4sqft = Rm4L * Rm4W, where… Housesqft = Rm1sqft + Rm2sqft + Rm3sqft + Rm4sqft 3. Output results: Display the total square feet (Housesqft) of the house // House Measurement Computation // Programmer: Neal Fowler Main module // Declare Variables Declare Rm1L Declare Rm1W Declare Rm2L Declare Rm2W Declare Rm3L Declare Rm3W Declare Rm4L Declare Rm4W Declare Rm1sqft Declare Rm2sqft Declare Rm3sqft Declare Rm4sqft Declare Housesqft Write “Home Measurement Program” Write “This program computes the total” Write “square feet (living space) of a house.” Call Input Data module Call Perform Calculations module Call Output Results...
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...whose sides have the following values, and find the six trigonometric functions of the angle A. 1. a = 4, b = 3, c = 5 2. a = 2, b = 3, c = 13 3. a = 2, b = 5, c = 13 4. a = 1, b = 1/3 5. b = 21, c = 29 D. Solve the following problems. 1. The lengths of the sides of a rectangle are 5 cm and 10 cm respectively. What will be the length of the diagonal? 2. If the length of the diagonal of a square is 22 cm, what will be the length of one of the sides? 3. An 8m long ladder is leaning against a 5m high wall. How long is the foot of the ladder from the wall? 4. A lineman who is 3m away from an electrical post is holding a 12m cable wire which is connected to the top of the post. What is the height of the electric post? 5. A man travels 15 km due north, then goes 5 km due east. How far is he from his starting...
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...Submit Files - Homework 4 ------------------------------------------------- Top of Form Hide Folder Information | Folder | | Homework 4 | Instructions | | FunctionsIn this homework, you will design a program to perform the following task:Write a program, using functions, that calculates the area and perimeter of a rectangle whose dimensions (Length and width) are provided by a user. Assume the rooms are rectangular and that the user can enter from 1 to 10 rooms for the house. Also calculate and display the total area and total perimeter (i.e. the sum of the perimeters) of the house. Note: this is very similar to Assignment 1 and you can reuse any code there that is appropriate. Before attempting this exercise, be sure you have completed all of chapter 8 and course module readings, participated in the weekly conferences, and thoroughly understand the examples throughout the chapter. There are 4 main components of your submission including the problem analysis, program design and documentation, and sample test data.1. Provide your analysis for the following problem statement: You need to write a program that calculates the area and perimeter of a rectangle whose dimensions (Length and width) are provided by a user.Your analysis should be clearly written and demonstrate your thought process and steps used to analyze the problem. Be sure to include what is the required output? What is the necessary input and how you will obtain the required output from the given...
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...Jeremy Lovell CMIS 102 7987 Introduction to Problem Solving and Algorithm Design (2152) Bryan Nilsen 29 March 2015 NLT: 11:59 PM Program Description: This program will calculate the total usable square feet of a house by multiplying the length of width of each room and add up the product of each room to give the total square feet. Analysis: I know to calculate square feet of a room you have to multiply the length and width. Since the house has multiple rooms to get the total square feet you have to add the square feet of each room to get the total. I decide to create the input simple by giving the variables names that are easily identifiable. L stands for Length and W stands for Width, RM stands for room which is the product of the corresponding Length and Width. Finally SgFT is the sum of all three RMs. I used these variable names to easily see within the program where I get there data values. Test Data: | Input: | Output | Test Case 1: | Room1: length=10, width=20 Room2: length=15, width=10 Room3: length=20, width=15 | Total Square Feet: 650 | Test Case 2: | Room1: length=13, width=11 Room2: length=9, width=7 Room3: length=22, width=19 | Total Square Feet: 624 | Test Case 3: | Room1: length=8, width=6 Room2: length=4, width=12 Room3: length=30, width=25 | Total Square Feet: 846 | Pseudocode: //Declare Variables Declare L1, L2, L3, W1, W2, W3, RM1, RM2, RM3 and SqFT //Set Values of Variables Set L1=10 Set L2=15 Set L3=20 Set W1=20 ...
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