Exam 9: Introduction to High-Level Language Programming
Exam 1: An Introduction to Computer Science50 Questions
Exam 2: Algorithm Discovery and Design50 Questions
Exam 3: The Efficiency of Algorithms50 Questions
Exam 4: The Building Blocks: Binary Numbers, Boolean Logic, and Gates50 Questions
Exam 5: Computer Systems Organization50 Questions
Exam 6: An Introduction to System Software and Virtual Machines50 Questions
Exam 7: Computer Networks, The Internet, and the World Wide Web50 Questions
Exam 8: Information Security50 Questions
Exam 9: Introduction to High-Level Language Programming50 Questions
Exam 10: The Tower of Babel50 Questions
Exam 11: Compilers and Language Translation50 Questions
Exam 12: Models of Computation49 Questions
Exam 13: Simulation and Modeling50 Questions
Exam 14: Electronic Commerce and Databases50 Questions
Exam 15: Artificial Intelligence50 Questions
Exam 16: Computer Graphics and Entertainment: Movies, Games, and Virtual Communities50 Questions
Exam 17: Making Decisions About Computers, Information, and Society50 Questions
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Discuss documentation at length, including definitions of all the different types.
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List four expectations of a program written in a high-level language.
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____ is the rules for exactly how statements must be written in a programming language.
(Multiple Choice)
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What question should a feasibility study address, and what are some of the possible answers?
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A program written in a(n) procedural language consists of sequences of statements that manipulate data items. _________________________
(True/False)
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Machine language can use the notation --, //, or # to denote a program comment.
(True/False)
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Most programming languages are now presented within an ____.
(Multiple Choice)
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Even though a high-level programming language allows the programmer to think of memory locations in abstract rather than physical terms, the programmer is still directing, via program instructions, every change in the value of a memory location.
(True/False)
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