I couldn't tell what answer your teacher expects to get for this question. Ask him/her personally.
Global variable.
global
No it is because compiled programs are scared so they run like stink. Plus, uncompiled programs, ie. source programs, do not run at all... neither slowly nor fast.
When you acess a global variable inside main function you must use the same name, because the variable declared as global can be accessed by any function/procedure on the class where it was defined.
Yes, but you may cause truncation error because the short variable does not necessarily have the same range as an int variable. Most modern compilers will flag this as a warning. If you know that the value of the int variable will not exceed the range of a short variable, you can explicitly prevent the warning with a typecast, i.e. someShort = (short) someInt; and the compiler will assume that you know what you are doing.
Programming languages are important because they....well...help us make programs :) High level programming languages are especially important because they help abstract away all of the little details that are required in low level languages.
Because they are created and destroyed on 'last-in-first-out' principle.
They should be required to use drawing programs because they are more efficient and kids understand them better.
Yes it does, because independent variable is what is being manipulated and we measure dependent variable, independent variable affects the results aka dependent variable.
There is no answer to a manipulated variable because "a manipulated variable" is not a question!
because it can change according to the independent variable. this dependent variable depends on the independent variable for its output. the independent variable is not affected by the dependent variable because the independent variable if found out first.
it is basically asking what the definition of responding variable is and the book says, The variable that changes because of the manipulated variable is the responding variable.
The dependent variable.
yes, because dependent variable is made by independent variable
Hello, Well what you would be looking for is what an independent variable means. Assuming you understand what a variable is and a dependant variable is, here goes: An independant variable is the variable which you change in an experiment. Note you can only have 1 variable that can change in an experiment and more than one independent variable will result in an unfair experiment. An example is an experiment looking at the growth of trees in the Dark, in a dimly lit room and in the direct sun. The independant variable is the location of the experiment, because this is what is being changed. Simply: The Independent Variable is the variable that is independent and you change. The dependant variable is what changes when the independent variable changes. To conduct an experiment, you will have an independent variable and change that to see how the dependant variable changes with the independent one. Hope I Helped
Mark ran down the block trying to avoid the bullies following him.If you understand what a varable is,just but the variable in a sentence. Ben had an arm restle with a two year old and imiddiately won. Understand better?I really hope so because there is no other way I can teach it unless I misunderstood your question.
The manipulated/independent variable is a variable that changes and it is what the responding/dependent variable change because of the manipulated variable.
because it is independent
Yes, I think it does. Because when the independent variable changes the dependent variable relies on it.