This program will determine the letter grade for a student. It will ask for scores (could be labs, activities, quizzes, or projects) and then display some basic statistics derived from the scores.
In Python, Write a program that continuously asks for a non-negative score until the user enters -1. IF the user enters a valid score ask for the possible score for that assignment, we will not assume all scores will have the same maximum value. We will assume that no one will receive a score of 0 on any assignment IF anything it is actually turned in, meaning a score of 0 indicates that the score was not turned it. It’s still the score for the assignment, but this fact will be used later in the assignment. Once all of the scores have been entered display the following information:
• Total number of scores entered. • Total points for the student. • Total number of possible points • Class percentage, with 2 decimal place. • Letter grade using the 90, 80, 70, 60 grading scale. • If we believe the student has dropped. We will assume this is true if ALL of the entered scores are 0 (indicating that nothing was turned it). • If all of the scores were turned in or if the student is missing at least one score
In: Computer Science
Required information Great Adventures Problem AP3-1 [The following information applies to the questions displayed below.] Tony and Suzie graduate from college in May 2021 and begin developing their new business. They begin by offering clinics for basic outdoor activities such as mountain biking or kayaking. Upon developing a customer base, they’ll hold their first adventure races. These races will involve four-person teams that race from one checkpoint to the next using a combination of kayaking, mountain biking, orienteering, and trail running. In the long run, they plan to sell outdoor gear and develop a ropes course for outdoor enthusiasts. On July 1, 2021, Tony and Suzie organize their new company as a corporation, Great Adventures Inc. The articles of incorporation state that the corporation will sell 36,000 shares of common stock for $1 each. Each share of stock represents a unit of ownership. Tony and Suzie will act as co-presidents of the company. The following transactions occur from July 1 through December 31. Jul. 1 Sell $18,000 of common stock to Suzie. Jul. 1 Sell $18,000 of common stock to Tony. Jul. 1 Purchase a one-year insurance policy for $4,320 ($360 per month) to cover injuries to participants during outdoor clinics. Jul. 2 Pay legal fees of $1,500 associated with incorporation. Jul. 4 Purchase office supplies of $1,400 on account. Jul. 7 Pay for advertising of $370 to a local newspaper for an upcoming mountain biking clinic to be held on July 15. Attendees will be charged $40 on the day of the clinic. Jul. 8 Purchase 10 mountain bikes, paying $12,300 cash. Jul. 15 On the day of the clinic, Great Adventures receives cash of $2,800 from 70 bikers. Tony conducts the mountain biking clinic. Jul. 22 Because of the success of the first mountain biking clinic, Tony holds another mountain biking clinic and the company receives $3,350. Jul. 24 Pay $960 to a local radio station for advertising to appear immediately. A kayaking clinic will be held on August 10, and attendees can pay $110 in advance or $160 on the day of the clinic. Jul. 30 Great Adventures receives cash of $7,700 in advance from 70 kayakers for the upcoming kayak clinic. Aug. 1 Great Adventures obtains a $40,000 low-interest loan for the company from the city council, which has recently passed an initiative encouraging business development related to outdoor activities. The loan is due in three years, and 6% annual interest is due each year on July 31. Aug. 4 The company purchases 14 kayaks, paying $20,400 cash. Aug. 10 Twenty additional kayakers pay $3,200 ($160 each), in addition to the $7,700 that was paid in advance on July 30, on the day of the clinic. Tony conducts the first kayak clinic. Aug. 17 Tony conducts a second kayak clinic, and the company receives $11,900 cash. Aug. 24 Office supplies of $1,400 purchased on July 4 are paid in full. Sep. 1 To provide better storage of mountain bikes and kayaks when not in use, the company rents a storage shed for one year, paying $3,240 ($270 per month) in advance. Sep. 21 Tony conducts a rock-climbing clinic. The company receives $14,000 cash. Oct. 17 Tony conducts an orienteering clinic. Participants practice how to understand a topographical map, read an altimeter, use a compass, and orient through heavily wooded areas. The company receives $18,000 cash. Dec. 1 Tony decides to hold the company’s first adventure race on December 15. Four-person teams will race from checkpoint to checkpoint using a combination of mountain biking, kayaking, orienteering, trail running, and rock-climbing skills. The first team in each category to complete all checkpoints in order wins. The entry fee for each team is $500. Dec. 5 To help organize and promote the race, Tony hires his college roommate, Victor. Victor will be paid $40 in salary for each team that competes in the race. His salary will be paid after the race. Dec. 8 The company pays $1,800 to purchase a permit from a state park where the race will be held. The amount is recorded as a miscellaneous expense. Dec. 12 The company purchases racing supplies for $2,900 on account due in 30 days. Supplies include trophies for the top-finishing teams in each category, promotional shirts, snack foods and drinks for participants, and field markers to prepare the racecourse. Dec. 15 The company receives $20,000 cash from a total of forty teams, and the race is held. Dec. 16 The company pays Victor’s salary of $1,600. Dec. 31 The company pays a dividend of $3,500 ($1,750 to Tony and $1,750 to Suzie). Dec. 31 Using his personal money, Tony purchases a diamond ring for $4,900. Tony surprises Suzie by proposing that they get married. Suzie accepts and they get married! The following information relates to year-end adjusting entries as of December 31, 2021. Depreciation of the mountain bikes purchased on July 8 and kayaks purchased on August 4 totals $8,500. Six months’ of the one-year insurance policy purchased on July 1 has expired. Four months of the one-year rental agreement purchased on September 1 has expired. Of the $1,400 of office supplies purchased on July 4, $270 remains. Interest expense on the $40,000 loan obtained from the city council on August 1 should be recorded. Of the $2,900 of racing supplies purchased on December 12, $140 remains. Suzie calculates that the company owes $13,700 in income taxes. Part 7 Post the closing entries of retained earnings to the T-account.
How do I post to the T-account?
In: Accounting
Provide a number of examples(both positive and negative) that indicate the impact of software on our society?
In: Computer Science
In: Nursing
In: Operations Management
A group of music lovers in a large urban area incorporate a company, Mozart Holdings Ltd., in order to purchase land and build a music hall that they claim will be “a glittering jewel in the cultural crown” of the city. The corporation selects an architectural firm that will design the building, a construction company that will construct the music hall, and chooses other suppliers who will provide goods and services necessary to the planning and development of a unique structure. One of the contracts that Mozart enters into is with an artist, Paige Presley, who is commissioned to produce an artistic work for the main lobby of the music hall. Presley is to be paid the sum of $50 000 for the work, and Mozart stipulates that the work is to be in any medium, but it must be permanently affixed to the north wall of the lobby, and must be of a size no less than 10 metres by 15 metres. The artist and the corporation enter into a written contract whereby the artist agrees to create the artistic work, warrants that it is her original work, and transfers the work to Mozart Holdings Ltd., in consideration of payment of the agreed‐upon contract price. No mention is made of moral rights. Presley designs and creates an artistic work that is an abstracted representation of musicians, musical instruments and musical notes on a scale. The work is created out of a series of more than two hundred 30 cm by 30 cm ceramic tiles that are made by the artist by hand and fired in her kiln in her studio. The artist and two assistants install the work on the north wall of the lobby, in time for the official opening of the music hall. The work is titled “The Song of Ages.” Presley attends the official opening for the music hall, at which many dignitaries are present. Media representatives are present, and photographers take pictures of the lobby, the people present, and Presley’s artistic work. At a table in the lobby, Presley notices a brochure that solicits funds from donors, asking them to contribute to the operation of the music hall. Donors are promised various “gifts” for donations at different levels of giving, ranging from music CDs for donations of $50 to $100, up to the “benefactor” level. Those who make a donation at the benefactor level will have their name inscribed in one of the tiles that form the work “The Song of Ages.” Question (8): Presley is incensed and embarrassed that her art would be defaced in this fashion. She considers commencing a court action, seeking an injunction. Evaluate the situation and advise what chances of success she has and on what grounds?
In: Operations Management
In: Nursing
21. Make a comparison of welding, adhesive joining, and
mechanical fastening in regard to bond strength and service
temperature limitations.
22. List four basic types of fusion welds, and draw sketches.
23. Lis any three defects associated with fusion welding, and
describe them briefly.
24. Draw a sketch of weld section, and label three zones; namely:
base metal, weld metal and heat affected zone.
25. Define power density and include its units, and describe how
power density affects size of heat affected zone?
26. Sketch Fe-Fe3C equilibrium phase diagram, and identify the
following:
a. Alpha region
b. Gamma region
c. Delta region
d. Eutectic point
e. Eutectoid point
f. Lower critical temperature line, A1
27. Identify the methods that can be employed to minimize the
distortion in the welded workpieces.
28. Identify one high power density and one low power density
welding process.
29. Sketch a fillet weld, and identify weld size, throat size and
convexity or concavity?
30. Two AISI1020 Steel plates 6 mm thick each are to be welded
through a T-Joint double fillet weld using
SMAW process. Assume that each leg of the fillet weld is equal to 4
mm, and the weld has a flat face.
Perform the tasks:
a. How much metal in grams will be required to make the welds?
Density of steel weld metal is 7.85
g/cm3.
b. How many electrodes will be required to make the weld if
diameter of the electrode is 4 mm, and
length is 350 mm? Assume that electrode metal deposition efficiency
is 65%.
In: Mechanical Engineering
The wastewater treatment plant will also treat wastewater originating from the industrial activity of pulp and paper in the near future. Proposed and describe appropriate unit processes that can be added to the plant.
In: Civil Engineering
A professor in the accounting department of a business school claims that there is much more variability in the final exam scores of students taking the introductory accounting course as a requirement than for students taking the course as part of a major in accounting. Random samples of 16 non-accounting majors (group 1) and 15 accounting majors (group 2) are taken from the professor's class roster in his large lecture, and the following results are computed based on the final exam scores:
n1 = 16, S12 = 154.6, n2 = 15, S22 = 48.5
(a) At the 0.05 level of significance, is there evidence to support the professor's claim?
(b) What assumptions do you make here about the two populations in order to justify your use of the F test?
In: Math
Question 1: The Cost-Less Corp. supplies its four retail outlets from its three plants. The shipping cost per shipment from each plant to each retail outlet is given below.
|
R1 |
R2 |
R3 |
R4 |
|
|
P1 |
30 |
10 |
25 |
20 |
|
P2 |
15 |
25 |
30 |
10 |
|
P3 |
20 |
30 |
15 |
20 |
Part a) Formulate this problem as an assignment problem and solve it to find the best strategy for assigning production plants to retail outlets. (No need to show your steps, only list all possible assignments and minimum assignment cost)
Part b) Each plant can produce up to 150 products per month. Retail outlets 1, 2, and 3 need to receive 100, 120, 150, and 100 products per month. The company makes a revenue of 110 in for the manufacture of each unit of product. (Only show the table)
Part c) Use the minimum cost rule to construct an initial BF solution and calculate its transportation cost. (Show the final solution)
In: Operations Management
Myrtle Air Express decided to offer direct service from Cleveland to Myrtle Beach. Management must decide between a full-price service using the company’s new fleet of jet aircraft and a discount service using smaller capacity commuter planes. It is clear that the best choice depends on the market reaction to the service Myrtle Air offers. Management developed estimates of the contribution to profit for each type of service based upon two possible levels of demand for service to Myrtle Beach: strong and weak. The following table shows the estimated quarterly profits (in thousands of dollars):
| Demand for Service | ||
| Service | Strong | Weak |
| Full price | $1440 | -$530 |
| Discount | $1000 | $480 |
| Optimistic approach | |
| Conservative approach | |
| Minimax regret approach |
In: Operations Management
I WANT THIS CODE TO BE SIMPLE BECAUSE I AM NEW TO CODING AND I WANT TO KNOW THE DETAILS! straight C Program. write a quiz game where a number of questions are asked and the user will win each time he answers right. and he loses each time he answers wrong.
the type of questions asked can be about sports or anything else. You can put 5 quiz questions.
It should only include the following: #include <stdio.h> and #include <stdlib.h>
because it is a simple code.
In: Computer Science
Alan Legler requires an estimate of the cost of goods lost by fire on March 9. Merchandise on hand on January 1 was $38,600. Purchases since January 1 were $65,700; freight-in, $3,300; purchase returns and allowances, $2,200. Sales are made at 33 1/3% above cost and totaled $99,900 to March 9. Goods costing $10,000 were left undamaged by the fire; remaining goods were destroyed.
Compute the cost of goods destroyed. (Round gross profit percentage and final answer to 0 decimal places, e.g. 15% or 125.)
| Cost of goods destroyed |
$ |
Compute the cost of goods destroyed, assuming that the gross profit is 33 1/3% of sales. (Round ratios for computational purposes to 5 decimal places, e.g. 78.72345% and final answer to 0 decimal places, e.g. 28,987.)
| Cost of goods destroyed |
$ |
In: Accounting
11
consider the following information for Evans, Inc. when the company entered bankruptcy proceedings:
| Account | Balance per Books Dr (Cr) |
|---|---|
| Cash | $31,700 |
| Accounts receivable | 646,800 |
| Inventory | 320,000 |
| Prepaid expenses | 10,600 |
| Buildings, net | 750,000 |
| Equipment, net | 123,500 |
| Goodwill | 88,000 |
| Wages payable | (77,300) |
| Taxes payable | (30,900) |
| Accounts payable | (967,300) |
| Notes payable | (205,400) |
| Common stock | (1,200,000) |
| Retained earnings—deficit | 510,300 |
| Total | $0 |
Inventory with a book value of $240,000 and realizable value of $175,000 is security for notes payable of $145,000. The equipment secures the remaining notes payable. Expected realizable values of the assets are:
| Accounts receivable | $300,000 |
| Inventory | 200,000 |
| Buildings | 250,000 |
| Equipment | 40,000 |
The prepaid expenses and goodwill have a realizable value of zero. The entire wages payable balance is a priority liability.
Required
Compute the estimated deficiency to unsecured creditors.
Do not use negative signs with any of your answers below.
| Assets pledged to fully-secured creditors | $Answer |
| Less: Liabilities to fully-secured creditors | Answer |
| Available as free assets | Answer |
| Unpledged assets | Answer |
| Less: Unsecured liabilities with priority | Answer |
| Net free assets | $Answer |
| Liabilities to partially-secured creditors | $Answer |
| Less: Assets pledged to partially-secured creditors | Answer |
| Unsecured portion | Answer |
| Unsecured liabilities | Answer |
| Total unsecured liabilities | $Answer |
| Estimated deficiency to unsecured creditors | $Answer |
In: Accounting