Consider the following table:
| SS | DF | MS | F | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Among Treatments | 1916.25 | |||
| Error | ? | 12 | 263.24 | |
| Total | 19 |
Step 1 of 8:
Calculate the sum of squares of experimental error. Please round your answer to two decimal places.
Step 2 of 8:
Calculate the degrees of freedom among treatments.
Step 3 of 8:
Calculate the mean square among treatments. Please round your answer to two decimal places.
Step 4 of 8:
Calculate the F-value. Please round your answer to two decimal places.
Step 5 of 8:
What is the sum of squares of sample means about the grand mean? Please round your answer to two decimal places.
Step 6 of 8:
What is the variation of the individual measurements about their respective means? Please round your answer to two decimal places.
Step 7 of 8:
What is the critical value of F at the 0.1 level? Please round your answer to four decimal places, if necessary.
Step 8 of 8:
Is F significant at 0.1?
In: Statistics and Probability
| SS | DF | MS | F | |
| Among Treatments | 2 | 3.83 | ||
| Error | 3848 | ? | ||
| Total | 6115.8 | 15 |
Step 1 of 8: Calculate the sum of squares among treatments. Please round your answer to two decimal places.
Step 2 of 8: Calculate the degrees of freedom among experimental error.
Step 3 of 8: Calculate the mean square among treatments. Please round your answer to two decimal places.
Step 4 of 8: Calculate the mean square of the experimental error. Please round your answer to two decimal places.
Step 5 of 8: What is the sum of squares of sample means about the grand mean? Please round your answer to two decimal places.
Step 6 of 8: What is the variation of the individual measurements about their respective means? Please round your answer to two decimal places.
Step 7 of 8: What is the critical value of F at the 0.050.05 level? Please round your answer to four decimal places, if necessary
Step 8 of 8: Is F significant at 0.050.05? (Yes, No)
In: Statistics and Probability
Consider the following table:
| SS | DF | MS | F | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Among Treatments | ? | 5 | 824.27 | |
| Error | 294.76 | |||
| Total | 7363.71 | 16 |
Step 1 of 8: Calculate the sum of squares among treatments. Please round your answer to two decimal places.
Step 2 of 8: Calculate the sum of squares of experimental error. Please round your answer to two decimal places
Step 3 of 8: Calculate the degrees of freedom of experimental error.
Step 4 of 8: Calculate the F-value. Please round your answer to two decimal places.
Step 5 of 8: What is the sum of squares of sample means about the grand mean? Please round your answer to two decimal places.
Step 6 of 8: What is the variation of the individual measurements about their respective means? Please round your answer to two decimal places.
Step 7 of 8: What is the critical value of F at the 0.1 level? Please round your answer to four decimal places, if necessary.
Step 8 of 8: Is F significant at 0.1? (yes, no)
In: Statistics and Probability
Consider the following table:
| SS | DF | MS | F | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Among Treatments | ? | 3 | 930.54 | |
| Error | 287.24 | |||
| Total | 6238.5 | 15 |
Step 1 of 8: Calculate the sum of squares among treatments. Please round your answer to two decimal places.
Step 2 of 8: Calculate the sum of squares of experimental error. Please round your answer to two decimal places.
Step 3 of 8: Calculate the degrees of freedom of experimental error.
Step 4 of 8: Calculate the F-value. Please round your answer to two decimal places.
Step 5 of 8: What is the sum of squares of sample means about the grand mean? Please round your answer to two decimal places.
Step 6 of 8: What is the variation of the individual measurements about their respective means? Please round your answer to two decimal places.
Step 7 of 8: What is the critical value of F at the 0.1 level? Please round your answer to four decimal places, if necessary.
Step 8 of 8: Is F significant at 0.10.1? (yes, no)
In: Statistics and Probability
Consider the following table: SS DF MS F Among Treatments ? 5 0.87 Error 3286.3 Total 4715.6 15
Step 1 of 8 : Calculate the sum of squares among treatments. Please round your answer to two decimal places.
Step 2 of 8: Calculate the degrees of freedom among treatments.
Step 3 of 8: Calculate the mean square among treatments. Please round your answer to two decimal places.
step 4 of 8 Calculate the F-value. Please round your answer to two decimal places.
step 5 of 8 What is the sum of squares of sample means about the grand mean? Please round your answer to two decimal places.
Step 6 of 8: What is the variation of the individual measurements about their respective means? Please round your answer to two decimal places.
Step 7 of 8: What is the critical value of F at the 0.05 level? Please round your answer to four decimal places, if necessary.
Step 8 of 8: Is F significant at 0.05?
In: Statistics and Probability
Bradley-Link’s December 31, 2018, balance sheet included the following items: Long-Term Liabilities ($ in millions) 8.0% convertible bonds, callable at 102 beginning in 2019, due 2022 (net of unamortized discount of $2) [note 8] $198 11.0% registered bonds callable at 105 beginning in 2028, due 2032 (net of unamortized discount of $1) [note 8] 61 Shareholders’ Equity 7 Equity—stock warrants Note 8: Bonds (in part) The 8.0% bonds were issued in 2005 at 98.0 to yield 10%. Interest is paid semiannually on June 30 and December 31. Each $1,000 bond is convertible into 50 shares of the Company’s no par common stock. The 11.0% bonds were issued in 2009 at 103 to yield 10%. Interest is paid semiannually on June 30 and December 31. Each $1,000 bond was issued with 50 detachable stock warrants, each of which entitles the holder to purchase one share of the Company’s no par common stock for $30, beginning 2019. On January 3, 2019, when Bradley-Link’s common stock had a market price of $37 per share, Bradley-Link called the convertible bonds to force conversion. 90% were converted; the remainder were acquired at the call price. When the common stock price reached an all-time high of $42 in December of 2019, 40% of the warrants were exercised. Required: 1. Prepare the journal entries that were recorded when each of the two bond issues was originally sold in 2005 and 2009. 2. Prepare the journal entry to record (book value method) the conversion of 90% of the convertible bonds in January 2019 and the retirement of the remainder. 3. Assume Bradley-Link induced conversion by offering $170 cash for each bond converted. Prepare the journal entry to record (book value method) the conversion of 90% of the convertible bonds in January 2019. 4. Assume Bradley-Link induced conversion by modifying the conversion ratio to exchange 55 shares for each bond rather than the 50 shares provided in the contract. Prepare the journal entry to record (book value method) the conversion of 90% of the convertible bonds in January 2019. 5. Prepare the journal entry to record the exercise of the warrants in December 2019.
In: Accounting
EBECEDE Company has the following inventory transactions for the month of February:
| Units | Unit Cost | |
| Beginning, Feb. 1 | 10,000 | 40 |
| Purchases, Feb. 10 | 10,000 | 43 |
| Sold, Feb. 15 | 15,000 | |
| Purchases, Feb. 18 | 5,000 | 44 |
| Sold, Feb. 25 | 2,000 |
The company uses the perpetual inventory system. Determine the cost of inventory on February 29 and cost of goods sold under:
| Inventory Cost Flow | Ending Inventory | Cost of Goods Sold (COGS |
| First in, first out (FIFO) | ||
| Weighted Average | ||
| Last in, first out (LIFO) |
In: Accounting
A government entity sets a Food Defect Action Level (FDAL) for the various foreign substances that inevitably end up in the foods we eat. The FDAL level for insect filth in peanut butter is 0.60 insect fragment (larvae, eggs, body parts, and so on) per gram. Suppose that a supply of peanut butter contains 0.60 insect fragment per gram. Compute the probability that the number of insect fragments in a 7-gram sample of peanut butter is
(a) exactly five. (Round to four decimal places as needed.)
Fill in the blanks to complete the statement below.
About _____ (16,18, 13, 15) of every 100 7-gram samples of this supply will contain exactly 5 insect fragments.
(b) fewer than five. (Round to four decimal places as needed.)
Fill in the blanks to complete the statement below.
About _____ (59,61, 57, 58) of every 100 7-gram samples of this supply will contain fewer than 5 insect fragments.
(c) at least five. (Round to four decimal places as needed.)
Fill in the blanks to complete the statement below.
About _____ (38,41, 44, 42) of every 100 7-gram samples of this supply will contain at least 5 insect fragments.
(d) at least one. Interpret the results. (Round to four decimal places as needed.)
Fill in the blanks to complete the statement below.
About _____ (101,99, 96,100) of every 100 7-gram samples of this supply will contain at least 1 insect fragments.
(e) Would it be unusual for a 7-gram sample of this supply of peanut butter to contain seven or more insect fragments?
It would ______(be, not be) unusual. About ____ (11, 14, 16, 13) of every 100 7-gram samples of this supply will contain at least 7 insect fragments.
In: Statistics and Probability
Write a program In C to compute internet charges according to a rate schedule.
The rate schedule is as follows:
$0.08 per GB for usage between 0 and 40 GB, inclusive
$0.07 per GB for usage between 41 GB and 70 GB, inclusive
$0.05 per GB for usage between 71 GB and 110 GB, inclusive
$0.04 per GB for usage greater than 110 GB
Learning Objectives
In this assignment, you will:
Requirements
Your code must use these four functions, using these names (in addition to main):
Requirements for the getData Function
|
Purpose: |
This function prompts the user for an account number (integer) and a GB value (integer). It passes these values back to main via two output parameters. |
|
Output Parameters: |
|
|
Algorithm: |
Prompt and read. There must be only one prompt, and the user must enter the data on one line with a space between each value. |
|
Return value: |
None |
Requirements for the computeCharges Function
|
Purpose: |
This function computes the charges for one transaction. It uses one input parameter (GB value as an integer) and a return value (amount of the charge, which may include decimals). |
|
Input Parameter: |
|
|
Algorithm: |
Use a selection structure to determine the charge per GB, using the above rate schedule. Calculate the charges using multiplication. |
|
Return value: |
Transaction charges (may include decimals) |
Requirements for the printAccountInfo Function
|
Purpose: |
This function displays the information for one account transaction to the screen. |
|
Input Parameters: |
|
|
Algorithm: |
Print, using appropriate spacing and formatting. The transaction charges must display with two decimal places. |
|
Return value: |
None |
Requirements for the printTotals Function
|
Purpose: |
This function displays totals to the screen at the end of the program. |
|
Input Parameters: |
|
|
Algorithm: |
Print, using appropriate spacing and formatting. The sum of transaction charges must display with two decimal places. |
|
Return value: |
None |
Requirements for main:
Be sure the first prompt is for actual data, not the continuation response.
IMPORTANT NOTE ABOUT THIS LOOP – You will encounter the situation where there is a scanf for a number immediately before the scanf for the Y or N. We have seen this problem before…
Sample Run
Enter account number and GB used (one space between data): 12345
80
Account number: 12345 GB
Used:
80
Charge: 4.00
Do you wish to continue? (y/n) y
Enter account number and GB used (one space between data): 98765
25
Account number: 98765 GB
Used:
25
Charge: 2.00
Do you wish to continue? (y/n) Y
Enter account number and GB used (one space between data): 25413
120
Account number: 25413 GB
Used:
120
Charge: 4.80
Do you wish to continue? (y/n) Y
Enter account number and GB used (one space between data): 42598
50
Account number: 42598 GB
Used:
50
Charge: 3.50
Do you wish to continue? (y/n) n
Total accounts =
4
Total GB Used = 275
Total Charges = 14.30
In: Computer Science
Write a program to compute internet charges according to a rate schedule.
The rate schedule is as follows:
$0.08 per GB for usage between 0 and 40 GB, inclusive
$0.07 per GB for usage between 41 GB and 70 GB, inclusive
$0.05 per GB for usage between 71 GB and 110 GB, inclusive
$0.04 per GB for usage greater than 110 GB
Learning Objectives
In this assignment, you will:
Requirements
Your code must use these four functions, using these names (in addition to main):
Requirements for the getData Function
|
Purpose: |
This function prompts the user for an account number (integer) and a GB value (integer). It passes these values back to main via two output parameters. |
|
Output Parameters: |
|
|
Algorithm: |
Prompt and read. There must be only one prompt, and the user must enter the data on one line with a space between each value. |
|
Return value: |
None |
Requirements for the computeCharges Function
|
Purpose: |
This function computes the charges for one transaction. It uses one input parameter (GB value as an integer) and a return value (amount of the charge, which may include decimals). |
|
Input Parameter: |
|
|
Algorithm: |
Use a selection structure to determine the charge per GB, using the above rate schedule. Calculate the charges using multiplication. |
|
Return value: |
Transaction charges (may include decimals) |
Requirements for the printAccountInfo Function
|
Purpose: |
This function displays the information for one account transaction to the screen. |
|
Input Parameters: |
|
|
Algorithm: |
Print, using appropriate spacing and formatting. The transaction charges must display with two decimal places. |
|
Return value: |
None |
Requirements for the printTotals Function
|
Purpose: |
This function displays totals to the screen at the end of the program. |
|
Input Parameters: |
|
|
Algorithm: |
Print, using appropriate spacing and formatting. The sum of transaction charges must display with two decimal places. |
|
Return value: |
None |
Requirements for main:
Be sure the first prompt is for actual data, not the continuation response.
IMPORTANT NOTE ABOUT THIS LOOP – You will encounter the situation where there is a scanf for a number immediately before the scanf for the Y or N. We have seen this problem before…
Sample Run
Enter account number and GB used (one space between data): 12345
80
Account number: 12345 GB
Used:
80
Charge: 4.00
Do you wish to continue? (y/n) y
Enter account number and GB used (one space between data): 98765
25
Account number: 98765 GB
Used:
25
Charge: 2.00
Do you wish to continue? (y/n) Y
Enter account number and GB used (one space between data): 25413
120
Account number: 25413 GB
Used:
120
Charge: 4.80
Do you wish to continue? (y/n) Y
Enter account number and GB used (one space between data): 42598
50
Account number: 42598 GB
Used:
50
Charge: 3.50
Do you wish to continue? (y/n) n
Total accounts =
4
Total GB Used = 275
Total Charges = 14.30
In: Computer Science