I need step by step instructions of inserting these into a heap.
this, is, the, house, that, jack, built. They should be inserted in
this sequence. THen swap the first and last variables and do it
again. I know the answer is suppose to be but not sure how I'm
suppose to get that answer.
2nd iteration would be. built, is, the house, that
jack, this.
I know the ansers in array format would be just keep getting it
wrong on my own:
1. built | is | house | this | that | the | jack
2. built | house | jack | is | that | the | this
In: Computer Science
Caesars Palace® Las Vegas made headlines when it undertook a $75 million renovation.
In mid-September 2015, the hotel closed its then-named Roman Tower, which was last updated in 2001, and started a major renovation of the 567 rooms housed in that tower. On January 1, 2016, the newly renamed Julius Tower reopened, replacing the Roman Tower. In addition to renovating the existing rooms and suites in the former Roman Tower, 20 guest rooms were added to the Roman Tower. With the renovation completed, Caesars expects the Julius Tower room rate to average around $149 per night. This increase, a $25 or 20.2% increase, reflects, in part, the room improvements. Assume that the annual fixed operating costs for the Julius Tower in Caesars Palace® Las Vegas will be $5,000,000. This amount represents an increase of $200,000 per year compared to pre-renovation. Also assume that the variable cost per hotel room night after the renovation is $27; before therenovation, the variable cost per room night was $20. The contribution margin per room night after the renovation is $122; before the renovation, the contribution margin per room night was $129. The average hotel occupancy rate, in 2014, for Caesars Entertainment Corporation was 91.2%, according to its 2014 Form 10-K. By comparison, the average hotel occupancy rate in Las Vegas overall, for that same time period, was 86.8%, according to Stastia.com.
1. if Caesars has a target profit of $15,000,000, how much sales revenue does the company need to make to achieve its target profit? (Round interim calculations to the nearest whole percent and/or dollar. Round your final answer to the nearest whole dollar.)
A. $42,153,444
B. $29,845,345
C. $24,390,244
D. $15,852,843
2. If Caesars has a target profit of $15,000,000, how many rooms must the company occupy throughout the year in order to reach its target profit? (Round your answer up to the nearest whole room.)
A. $240,385
B. $134,229
C. $1122,951
D. $163,935
3. What is each room's contribution margin after the renovations?
A. $104
B. $122
C. $97
D. $129
In: Accounting
Homework 3:
A car dealer pays $17,985 for each car purchased. The annual holding rate is estimated at 25%, and the ordering cost is $7,558. The dealer is selling an average of 516 cars a year.
3. Note the new information:
• The dealership can only park 45 cars in its small parking lot. Therefore, if needed, it will lease a nearby bigger parking lot, and use it to park access inventory.
• The dealer can get a discount of $1000 on the car's price if his order size is 275 cars or more.
3-1: If the dealer rejects the discount offer, what will be his order size?
a. 42 cars
b. 43 cars
c. 45 cars
d. None of the above.
3-2: If the dealer decides to accept the offer to order 275 cars, he uses the leased parking lot as a "Warehouse", and each time a car is sold from the small parking lot, he transfers a car from the leased large lot. Therefore, in his own lot, there are all the time 45 cars on display, but the inventory in the large lot is gradually depleting. What is the average inventory the dealership carry in the leased parking lot?
a. 275 cars
b. 275/2 cars
c. 38+(275/2)
d. 237/2
3-3 A car kept in the leased parking lot costs the dealer additional $250 in holding cost (which increases Ch¬). Calculate the annual total cost if the dealer decides to accept the "275" deal. Break down the costs: Annual Ordering cost, Annual Holding cost in the small parking lot, Annual Holding cost in the leased parking lot, Annual Purchasing cost. (not multiple choice, show work)
In: Accounting
In: Finance
Write a javascript code to Create a function called
Hotel that takes Room no, Customer name. amount paid. Write a code
to call hotel function for each customer and display details of
customers lodging in rooms with even room numbers.
I need only js and html code. no css
pls take screenshot of output , else I might dislike
thanks
In: Computer Science
The data in the table, from a survey of resort hotels with comparable rates on Hilton Head Island, show that room occupancy during the off-season (November through February) is related to the price charged for a basic room.
| Price per Day $ | Occupancy Rate % |
| 104 | 53 |
| 134 | 47 |
| 143 | 46 |
| 149 | 45 |
| 164 | 40 |
| 194 | 32 |
More detailed instructions are given on page 690 of the textbook (12th edition).
In: Statistics and Probability
A survey of 1060people who took trips revealed that 94 of them included a visit to a theme park. Based on those survey results, a management consultant claims that less than 11 % of trips include a theme park visit. Test this claim using the ?=0.01significance level.
(a) The test statistic is ___
(b) The P-value is ___
(c) The conclusion is
A. There is sufficient evidence to support the
claim that less than 11 % of trips include a theme park
visit.
B. There is not sufficient evidence to support the
claim that less than 11 % of trips include a theme park visit.
Independent random samples, each containing 90 observations,
were selected from two populations. The samples from populations 1
and 2 produced 36 and 26 successes, respectively.
Test ?0:(?1−?2)=0against ??:(?1−?2)>0 Use ?=0.1
(a) The test statistic is ___
(b) The P-value is ___
(c) The final conclusion is
A. There is not sufficient evidence to reject the
null hypothesis that (?1−?2)=0
B. We can reject the null hypothesis that
(?1−?2)=0 and conclude that (?1−?2)>0
In: Math
Consider a new hotel deciding on cleaning staff hiring for the upcoming season. Cleaning times depend on whether it is a stay-over room or a check-out. Suppose that a guest will check-out on a given day with probability 40%. From your experience in similar hotels you estimate that a stay-over room cleaning time is well-described with normal distribution with average 15 minutes and standard deviation 1 minute. Check-out room cleaning time is also normal but with average 30 minutes and standard deviation 10 minutes.
i. Consider an occupied room (stay-over or check-out), what is the average cleaning time for such a room?
ii. Find the variance for the cleaning time for an occupied room.
iii. Suppose that the hotel has 200 rooms, and you estimate that on a given day a room will be occupied with probability 90%. Only occupied rooms need cleaning. Find the average total cleaning time for the hotel. iv. Find the variance of the total cleaning time for the hotel.
Hints: remember var(X) = EX^2 − (EX)^2 .
In: Math
For several decades, it was a common practice in Southern California for houses to be built with pools in the backyard (as any airplane flight which ends at a Southern California airport will reveal). Now, however, that practice may be changing, possibly because of the recent demand for landscaped homes, which experts believe help reduce pollution. A recent study examined a random sample of
161
houses built in Southern California between 1950 and 1985 and an independent, random sample of
80
houses built in Southern California from 1992 to the present. The sample of houses built in 1950-1985 contained
72
houses with pools, and the sample of houses built from 1992-present contained
32
houses with pools. Based on this survey, can we conclude, at the
0.1
level of significance, that the proportion
p1
of all Southern California houses built in 1950-1985 that were built with pools is greater than the proportion
p2
of all Southern California houses built from 1992-present that were built with pools?
Perform a one-tailed test. Then fill in the table below.
Carry your intermediate computations to at least three decimal places and round your answers as specified in the table.
| The null hypothesis: |
H0: |
|||
| The alternative hypothesis: |
H1: |
|||
| The type of test statistic: | (Choose one)ZtChi squareF | |||
| The value of the
test statistic: (Round to at least three decimal places.) |
||||
| The critical value
at the
0.1 level of significance:(Round to at least three decimal places.) |
||||
| Can we conclude that the proportion of Southern California houses built with pools from 1950-1985 is greater than the proportion from 1985-present? |
Yes |
No |
||
In: Statistics and Probability
In: Statistics and Probability