| Title |
User |
Message |
Place |
Date Posted |
| Re: No Output |
ashlyn |
In the textbook, there is not sample output. Perhaps that's why? Still though, it is odd to have it up there with nothing below. |
p154ex6 |
Oct 31, 2008 - 11:58:28 pm UTC |
| ... |
02fentym |
Use the method they say to use. |
ccc97s5 |
Oct 31, 2008 - 11:53:52 pm UTC |
| what is allowed |
seyonv |
Are you allowed to jsut use / and modulo or do you have to use the method that it says to use |
ccc97s5 |
Oct 31, 2008 - 11:48:10 pm UTC |
| "Declassify" |
bbi5291 |
Haha, "declassify" contest problems... "de-categorize" might have been a better word |
General |
Oct 30, 2008 - 2:55:33 pm UTC |
| No output? |
vlackz |
Was browsing through easy questions and saw this... Wierd... |
p154ex6 |
Oct 30, 2008 - 2:52:39 am UTC |
| Re: My Suggestion |
hansonw1 |
CCC programs are categorized for the purposes of classwork: when a topic is taught, this makes it easier to find problems for people to test their programs on. But you're right, I think I'll declassi... |
General |
Oct 29, 2008 - 10:51:50 pm UTC |
| My Suggestion |
DrSane |
So my suggestion is that you only categorize by vague problem types which can be *immediately* inferred from the problem statement. Here is an example list of things that I think (in general) could b... |
General |
Oct 29, 2008 - 9:30:52 pm UTC |
| ...cont'd |
DrSane |
(Post got cut off by character limit) You can ignore the category, but even if someone accidentally glances at it, they can't help but start thinking about what they should do rather than why they sh... |
General |
Oct 29, 2008 - 9:19:42 pm UTC |
| I'm not sure if I completely agree... |
DrSane |
I'm not sure if I agree with the "Problem Type" category. Once you see the problem type, you can't help but narrow your mindset into thinking about it in terms of an end result. For example, if someo... |
General |
Oct 29, 2008 - 9:16:15 pm UTC |
| ... |
DrSane |
It's DFS. Not DPS. DFS stands for Depth-First Search. |
ccc00s4 |
Oct 29, 2008 - 8:58:10 pm UTC |