MYPROGRAMMINGLAB WITH PEARSON ETEXT
8th Edition
ISBN: 9780134225340
Author: Deitel
Publisher: PEARSON
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Textbook Question
Chapter 4, Problem 4.10E
(Average a Sequence of Integers) Write a
10 811 7 9 9999
indicating that the average of all the values preceding 9999 is to be calculated.
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(Count positive and negative numbers and compute the average of numbers) Write a program that reads an unspecified number of integers, determines how many positive and negative values have been read, and computes the total and average of the input values (not counting zeros). Your program ends with the input 0. Display the maximum, minimum, and average as a floating-point number. Here is a sample run:Enter an integer, the input ends if it is 0: 1 2 -1 3 0The number of positives is 3The number of negatives is 1The maximum is 3.0The minimum is -1.0The average is 1.25
(Financial: credit card number validation) Credit card numbers follow certain pat-
terns. A credit card number must have between 13 and 16 digits. It must start with:
4 for Visa cards
5 for Master cards
37 for American Express cards
6 for Discover cards
In 1954, Hans Luhn of IBM proposed an algorithm for validating credit card
numbers. The algorithm is useful to determine whether a card number is entered
correctly or whether a credit card is scanned correctly by a scanner. Credit card
numbers are generated following this validity check, commonly known as the
Luhn check or the Mod 10 check, which can be described as follows (for illustra-
tion, consider the card number 4388576018402626):
1. Double every second digit from right to left. If doubling of a digit results in a
two-digit number, add up the two digits to get a single-digit number.
4388576018402626
→ 2 * 2 = 4
→ 2 * 2 = 4
→ 4 * 2 = 8
→ 1 * 2 = 2
6 * 2 = 12 (1+ 2 = 3)
→ 5 * 2 = 10 (1+ 0 = 1)
→ 8 * 2 = 16 (1 + 6 = 7)
→ 4 * 2 = 8
(Count positive and negative numbers and compute the average of numbers)
Write a program that reads an unspecified number of integers, determines how many positive and negative values have been read, and computes the total and average of the input values (not counting zeros). Your program ends with the input 0. Display the average as a floating-point number.
*********** USE PYTHON *********
Sample Run 1
Sample Output 1:
Enter an integer, the input ends if it is 0: 1
Enter an integer, the input ends if it is 0: 2
Enter an integer, the input ends if it is 0: -1
Enter an integer, the input ends if it is 0: 3
Enter an integer, the input ends if it is 0: 0
The number of positives is 3
The number of negatives is 1
The total is 5
The average is 1.25
Sample Run 2
Sample Output 2:
Enter an integer, the input ends if it is 0: 0
No numbers are entered except 0
Chapter 4 Solutions
MYPROGRAMMINGLAB WITH PEARSON ETEXT
Ch. 4 - Find the error in each of the following. (Note:...Ch. 4 - State which values of the control variable x are...Ch. 4 - Write for statements that print the following...Ch. 4 - Prob. 4.8ECh. 4 - (Sum a Sequence of Integers) Write a program that...Ch. 4 - (Average a Sequence of Integers) Write a program...Ch. 4 - (Find the Smallest) Write a program that finds the...Ch. 4 - (Calculating the Sum of Even Integers) Write a...Ch. 4 - (Calculating the Product of Odd Integers) Write a...Ch. 4 - (Factorials) The factorial function is used...
Ch. 4 - (Modified Compound-Interest Program) Modify the...Ch. 4 - (Triangle-Printing Program) Write a program that...Ch. 4 - (Calculating Credit Limits) Collecting money...Ch. 4 - (Bar-Chart Printing Program) One interesting...Ch. 4 - (Calculating Sales)An online retailer sells five...Ch. 4 - (Truth Tables) Complete the following truth tables...Ch. 4 - Rewrite the program of Fig. 4.2 so that the...Ch. 4 - Prob. 4.22ECh. 4 - (Calculating the Compound Interest with...Ch. 4 - Assume i=1,j=2,k=3andm=2. What does each of the...Ch. 4 - (Table of Decimal, Binary, Octal and Hexadecimal...Ch. 4 - (Calculating the Value of )Calculate the value of...Ch. 4 - Prob. 4.27ECh. 4 - (Calculating Weekly Pay)A company pays its...Ch. 4 - (De Morgans Laws)In this chapter, we discussed the...Ch. 4 - (Replacing switch with if ... else)Rewrite the...Ch. 4 - (Diamond-Printing Program)Write a program that...Ch. 4 - (Modified Diamond-Printing Program)Modify the...Ch. 4 - (Roman-Numeral Equivalent of Decimal Values)Write...Ch. 4 - Describe the process you would use to replace a do...Ch. 4 - A criticism of the break statement and the...Ch. 4 - Prob. 4.36ECh. 4 - Describe in general how you would remove any...Ch. 4 - (The Twelve Days of Christmas Song) Write a...Ch. 4 - (Limitations of Floating-Point Numbers for...Ch. 4 - (World Population Growth) World population has...Ch. 4 - (Tax Plan Alternatives; The FairTax) There are...
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