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Western Washington - CS - 460
CS460 Introduction to Operating Systems Spring 2005 Midterm ExamInstructions: Answer all questions on the blue scan document provided by filling in the bubble corresponding to the correct answer. Remember to use only a number 2 pencil or it will not
Western Washington - CS - 512
1. _ languages are sometimes described as computing via side effects. (a) imperative (b) Object-oriented (c) dataflow (d) functional (e) logic or constraint-based 2. _languages employ a computational model based on the recursive definition of functio
Western Washington - CS - 460
CS460, Introduction to Operating Systems Winter 2005 Midterm ExamInstructions: Answer all questions on the blue scan document provided by filling in the bubble corresponding to the correct answer. There is only one correct answer per question. Each
Western Washington - CS - 512
CS 512 Programming Languages Fall 2005 Midterm Exam Instructions: Answer all questions on the scan document provided. There is no penalty for guessing (well technically I guess there is a penalty for guessing incorrectly). You must fill in all name a
Western Washington - CS - 410
Western Washington - CS - 410
1.- languages employ a computational model based on the recursive definition of functions. They take their inspiration from the lambda calculus, a formal computational model developed by Alonzo Church in the 1930s. (a) von Neumann (b) Object-oriented
Western Washington - MODULA - 2
Modula-2 report by Loren Loiseau For CSCI 512, Fall 2005 History Niklaus Wirth designed the Modula language in the mid-1970s as an experiment with concurrency and modularization. Modula was never released and development discontinued after Wirth publ
Western Washington - MODULA - 2
MODULE myhello;IMPORT InOut;PROCEDURE Greeting; VAR name : ARRAY [1 . 80] OF CHAR; PROCEDURE SecretNumber() : INTEGER; BEGIN RETURN 42; END SecretNumber; PROCEDURE GetName; BEGIN InOut.WriteString("Who are you?"); InOut.Re
Western Washington - MODULA - 2
IMPLEMENTATION MODULE ListUtil;FROM InOut IMPORT WriteString, WriteLn, WriteInt;FROM SYSTEM IMPORT ADDRESS;FROM Storage IMPORT ALLOCATE, DEALLOCATE;TYPE List = POINTER TO ListPair; ListElement = POINTER TO ListElemData; ListElemD
Western Washington - MODULA - 2
MODULE sieve;IMPORT InOut;CONST SIZE = 8190;VAR iter, maxiter, count: CARDINAL; flags: ARRAY [0.SIZE] OF BOOLEAN;PROCEDURE iteration;VAR i, k, prime: CARDINAL;BEGIN FOR i := 0 TO SIZE DO flags[i] := TRUE; END; count := 0;
Western Washington - MODULA - 2
DEFINITION MODULE ListUtil;FROM SYSTEM IMPORT ADDRESS;TYPE List;TYPE ListElement;TYPE ListElementType = (letString, letInteger, letList);(* list creation, destruction *)PROCEDURE CreateList() : List;PROCEDURE DestroyList(VAR list : List);
Western Washington - CS - 430
CS 430 Database TheoryWinter 2005 Lecture 5: Relational Algebra1What is the Relational Algebra?Answer: A collection of operations that can be applied to Relations yielding new Relations What's the idea behind the Relational Algebra? Defi
Western Washington - CS - 430
CS430 DatabaseTheoryWinter 2005 Lecture 11: SQL DDL1SQLDataTypesNumericINTEGER, INT, SMALLINTMySQL: TINYINT (1 BYTE), SMALLINT (2 BYTE), MEDIUMINT (3 BYTE), INT or INTEGER (4 BYTE), BIGINT (8 BYTE), both SIGNED and UNSIGNED MySQL: FLOAT
Western Washington - CS - 430
CS430 DatabaseTheoryWinter 2005 Lecture 7: Designing a Database Logical Level1LogicalDesignDefine the Relations and Attributes for a Relational Database Key problems: What tables will there be? What columns will each table have? Where wi
Western Washington - CS - 430
CS 430 Database TheoryWinter 2005 Lecture 16: Inside a DBMS1Topics Phyical Storage Indexing Query Optimization Making ACID Work Transactions Concurrency Journaling Rollback/Rollforward RecoveryDistributed Database2Physical Stor
Western Washington - CS - 430
CS 430 Database TheoryWinter 2005 Lecture 3: A Fifty Minute Introduction to Data Modeling1What is Data Modeling?Answer: Modeling the data that will be in our database What data will be in our database? The data needed to support our appl
Western Washington - CS - 241
Balanced Trees 2-3Trees 2-3-4 Trees Red-Black Trees AVL Balanced TreesBased on slides prepared by David Bover1Red-Black Trees Binarytree implementation of 2-3-4 treesbenefits of 2-3-4 tree without overheads Representeach 3-node a
Western Washington - CS - 241
EfficiencyofSortingAlgorithms Insertionsort Bubblesort Mergesort Quicksort RadixsortBasedonslidespreparedbyDavidBover1InsertionSort Arrayconsideredtobeintwosections sorted(initiallyempty) unsorted(initiallythewholearray) Ineachstep,tak
Western Washington - CS - 241
Trees Tree definitions and terminology Binary tree definition, properties, ADT traversals representation Binary Search Tree definition, properties, ADT efficiency of algorithms tree sort, saving trees Representation of general treesBased on s
Western Washington - CS - 241
Balanced Trees 2-3Trees 2-3-4 Trees Red-Black Trees AVL Balanced TreesBased on slides prepared by David Bover12-3-4 Trees Similarto a 2-3 tree, but can contain 4-nodes A 4-node contains 3 data items and can have 4 children Inserts and
Western Washington - CS - 141
CS141 Student Survey Form - Spring 2005 Name:Preferred e-mail address: Prior programing experience: (include programming language(s)you have studied and/or used, high school and college courses,work experience, etc.)Personal computer: (If
Western Washington - CS - 430
drop table if exists EMPLOYEE;create table EMPLOYEE ( FNAME VarChar(20) not null, MINIT Char(1) null, LNAME VarChar(20) not null, SSN Char(9) not null, BDATE Date not null, ADDRE
Western Washington - CS - 141
F:\Examples\Min_Max_Three>dir Volume in drive F has no label. Volume Serial Number is 3B69-1AFD Directory of F:\Examples\Min_Max_Three10/18/2004 09:36 AM <DIR> .10/18/2004 09:36 AM <DIR> .10/17/2004 02:39 PM
Western Washington - CS - 2
Sequential Index for Program Distribution Accompanying"Software Construction and Data Structures with Ada 95"by Michael B. Feldmancopyright 1996, Addison Wesley Publishing CompanyISBN 0-201-88795-9Comments and questions to mfeldman@seas.gwu.edu
Western Washington - CS - 430
drop table if exists Employee;create table Employee ( EID Integer not null, EName VarChar(30) not null, WorkLoc VarChar(20), MgrID Integer, constraint PK_EID primary key (EID) );drop table if exists
Western Washington - CS - 145
Professional John Smith0123456789 12 5500.00Hourly James Brown012345678 14 15.50
Western Washington - CS - 496
Presentation and Poster Guidelines (Spring 2008) The demonstrations will be held on Tuesday, June 10, from 1:00 to 5:30pm in CF115. The department will provide pizza and drinks (non-alcoholic, of course). There will be a break during the middle of th
Western Washington - CS - 496
Project Name: Team Members:Date: December ?, 2008Reviewer's Name: _ Please provide your impression of each of the following (1 = Awful, 5 = Outstanding). 1. The Project 1 2 3 4 5 NA How was the software that was built? Did it work? Do what it sho
Western Washington - CS - 496
Presentation and Poster Guidelines The demonstrations are scheduled for 1pm to 3pm on Tuesday, June 12 in CF115. The department will provide pizza and drinks (non-alcoholic, of course). 1. We have a lot of teams to get through in two hours. Your team
Western Washington - CS - 141
sort_3_numbersWITH Ada.Text_IO; WITH Ada.Float_Text_IO; PROCEDURE Sort_3_Numbers IS -| Reads three numbers and sorts them -| so that they are in increasing order. -| Author: M. B. Feldman, The George Washington University -| Last Modified: August 19
Western Washington - CS - 496
Presentation and Poster Guidelines The demonstrations will be given from 1pm to 3pm on Thursday, March 22 in CF120. The department will provide pizza and drinks (non-alcoholic, of course). 1. We have two teams to get through in two hours. Your team h
Western Washington - CS - 241
GraphsTerminology Operations on graphs Graph traversals Applications of graphsBased on slides prepared by David Bover1Terminology2TerminologyA graphA subgraphA line graphIdentify adjacent vertices, path, simple path, and cycle
Western Washington - CS - 430
CS 430 Database TheoryWinter 2005 Lecture 9: Fourth and Fifth Normal Forms1DecompositionsGiven a relation R = {A1, . , An} (all of the Ai are unique), then a set of relation schemas D = {R1, . , Rm} is a decomposition of R if R is the union o
Western Washington - CHEM - 425
11060Biochemistry 2001, 40, 11060-11064Incorporation of Nonnatural Amino Acids into Proteins by Using Various Four-Base Codons in an Escherichia coli in Vitro Translation SystemTakahiro Hohsaka, Yuki Ashizuka, Hikaru Taira, Hiroshi Murakami, and
Western Washington - CHEM - 375
MBE awards would not exist without metabolism as we know it.Catabolic pathways Anabolic pathwaysFig 10-6 glycolysisDetail of Fig 10-813-2Unnumbered, page 292 The role of ATP in a coupled reaction. G = Go' + RTlnQG (standard free energy
Western Washington - CHEM - 375
NADH is not transported DIRECTLY into the matrixFor: 2H+ + 2NADH + O2 N 2NAD+ + H2O+10 H+ pumped/2 e- or 10 H pumped /NADHFor: 2FADH2 + O2 N 2FAD + 2H2O+ 2see Table 12-1, p373In the e- transport system e- are transferred from species with
Western Washington - CHEM - 425
JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY, Feb. 2003, p. 20032009 0022-538X/03/$08.00 0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.77.3.20032009.2003 Copyright 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.Vol. 77, No. 3Multiple Amino Acid Residues within the Rabbit Prion Prote
Western Washington - CHEM - 425
Published on Web 01/23/2004Expanding the Substrate Repertoire of a DNA Polymerase by Directed EvolutionMing Fa, Annalisa Radeghieri, Allison A. Henry, and Floyd E. Romesberg*Contribution from the Department of Chemistry, The Scripps Research Inst
Western Washington - GEOL - 406
Name _Rubric Research Paper for Petrology Abstract (10): References (10): summary? (4) _ style? (3) _ style? (3) _ all cited? (4)_ length? (3) __ none missing? (3) _ Intro (10): Figures/Tables (10): describe problem? (4) _ ordered / cited in paper
Western Washington - GEOL - 406
Wirth Magmatic Differentiation Using M&M's1USING AN M&M MAGMA CHAMBER TO ILLUSTRATE MAGMATIC DIFFERENTIATIONKarl R. WirthGeology Department Macalester College St. Paul, MN 55105 wirth@macalester.eduBACKGROUND AND NOTES FOR INSTRUCTORS Purpos
Western Washington - GEOL - 407
Textures / Structures of Igneous RocksTextures are the relationships of crystals and glass at the smallest scale; structures are larger-scale features, often requiring a whole outcrop to fully describeCrystallinityThis is determined under 10x mag
Western Washington - GEOL - 306
Local Charge Balance HomeworkExamine the Topaz structure above. The two images Color in Ionic Number of Element are a stereo pair. If you cross your eyes to diagram Charge bonds superimpose the two, you will see the structure in 3Dark, Lg Oxygen D.
Western Washington - GEOL - 306
Local Charge Balance HomeworkExamine the Topaz structure above. The two images Color in Ionic Element are a stereo pair. If you cross your eyes to diagram Charge superimpose the two, you will see the structure in 3-D. Red Oxygen You can also view t
Western Washington - GEOL - 407
Your Name: _- C u t h e r e -Petrography Project Peer Review for _(Speaker Name)This form is to be used to critique the petrography presentations of your peers. They will not see your name, but you may retype your comments and submit them by em
Western Washington - STEWARS - 5
Raphael Ng Ralphcornelius.ng@utoronto.ca +1 647-271-1202 University of Toronto Dialogue on the analogy of love as discourse in Phaedrus 2934 WordsAbstract In response to Platos Phaedrus, this essay explores the possibilities for writing to be diale
Iowa State - T - 2
Detecting MaterialsRelated Distress in Concrete PavementsRESEARCH PROJECT TITLEtech transfer summaryObjectives Advance the in situ detection of materials-related distress in portland cement concrete (PCC) pavements Perform proof-of-concept t
Iowa State - MIDCON - 2007
Speed LimitRelated Issues on Gravel RoadsLitao Liu Department of Civil Engineering Kansas State University 2118 Fiedler Hall Manhattan, KS 66506-5000 litao@ksu.edu Sunanda Dissanayake Department of Civil Engineering Kansas State University 2118 Fied
Iowa State - CE - 354
Summary of Text Tables for Design related figures 9-1 9-2 9-3 9-4 9-5 9-6 9-7 9-8 9-9 9-10 9-11 9-12 9-13 9-14 9-15 9-16 9-17 9-18 9-19 9-20 9-21 9-22 9-23 9-24 9-25 9-26 9-27 9-28 364 366 368 370 370 374 375 376 376 378 382 385 386 386 387 387 388 3
Iowa State - MIDCON - 2007
Review of Demand Modeling Methodologies for Air-Related Transportation: An Institutional Challenge to IntermodalismXiubin Wang National Center for Freight and Infrastructure Research and Education University of Wisconsin, Madison 2205 Engineering Ha
Iowa State - MIDCON - 2005
Improving Surface Transportation Safety and Effectiveness through Modern Weather Technologies and InformationSamuel P. Williamson Office of the Federal Coordinator for Meteorological Services and Supporting Research 8455 Colesville Road, Suite 1500
Iowa State - NCR - 167
GENETIC CONTROL OF THE NUMBER OF EARS PER PLANT AND RELATED MORPHOLOGICAL TRAITS IN THE OPEN POLLINATED MAIZE POPULATION GOLDEN GLOW N. de Leon, J. G. Coors and S. M. Kaeppler University of Wisconsin Madison Prolificacy is a natural characteristic i
Iowa State - NCR - 167
Diverse Adapted Populations for Improvement of Northern Maize Inbreds Jennifer Taller and Rex Bernardo Department of Agronomy and Plant Genetics University of Minnesota The diversity of US Corn Belt germplasm has narrowed through the use of advanced
Iowa State - NCR - 167
NCR-167 Uniform 100-300 Maturity Trials - 2001 Trials were conducted at five locations (Elora, Ontario; Ottawa, Ontario; Cortland, NY; Watertown, SD; Fargo, ND) in 2001 from modified single-cross seed produced in 2000. Two related-line testers were u
Iowa State - MATH - 181
G. Polya, How to Solve ItSummary taken from G. Polya, "How to Solve It", 2nd ed., Princeton University Press, 1957, ISBN 0-691-08097-6. 1. UNDERSTANDING THE PROBLEM * First. You have to understand the problem. * What is t
Western Washington - ISTM - 201
Western Washington - GRAHAM - 7
Running Head: PROBLEMS WITH STEPWISE IN DAProblems with Stepwise Procedures in Discriminant AnalysisJames M. Graham Texas A&M University 77842-4225_ Graham, J. M. (2001, January). Problems with stepwise procedures in discriminant analysis. Pape
Western Washington - PSY - 515
Fall 2008 PSY515 Factor Analysis Project The dataset includes information from 304 individuals who are currently involved in a committed romantic relationship. Participants were given the following measure. You are interested in creating a multidimen
Western Washington - BIOL - 349
Oh My God.Tetanus Killed Kenny!Ed Evanson, Jacqueline Quint, Dani Deyette, Jordan Getz Kenny Gets TetanusKenny goes Fishing Kenny slices his hand open w/ fillet knife Kenny gets lock jaw and can't move his muscles because of the prot
Western Washington - BIOL - 349
Carpi the CarpenterQuestion: 59 year old Carpi shows up to theemergency room with shortness of breath. The evaluation reveals: HR 112, BP 138/88, Respiratory 35/min (rapid and shallow). Pale skin, cyanotic nail beds also present. An arterial blood
Western Washington - BIOL - 470
Gene Expressionnew frontiers the processes by which information contained in genes and genomes is decoded by cells, in order to produce molecules that determine the phenotypes observed in organisms, transcription is controlled so that the correct D
Western Washington - MBA - 510
Questions for presentations, CGE, MBA 510a Enterprise Strategy 1. Describe the important types of enterprise strategy. 2. In light of the types just described, analyze Starbucks' mission statement and identify the enterprise strategy implied by the m